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The Avila Perspective Chap. 20: Neeco Macias, Gamboa, Braekhus and More

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If you’re searching for the finer points of the sweet science, the straight jabs, the well-placed counter left hook and the flowing footwork, you are not going to find this in a fight featuring Neeco “The Rooster” Macias.

Not even close.

What you will find is a nonstop wrecking machine capable of unleashing a mountain of punches. And when you add Jesus Soto Karass into the mix, that’s a flaming Molotov Cocktail.

Macias (17-0, 10 KOs) faces Mexican veteran Soto Karass (28-13-4, 18 KOs) in the super welterweight main event Thursday Nov. 8, at Fantasy Springs Casino. ESPN2 will televise the Golden Boy Promotions card.

The last time Macias (pictured) stepped into the boxing ring he battered a fellow undefeated southpaw prospect named Marvin Cabrera for six rounds with over 1,000 blows. The boxing world hadn’t seen anything like it before, not in near 20 years when Ray Oliveira and “Cool” Vince Phillips lit it up in 2000 for a regional title.

I remember watching that fight between Phillips and Oliveira on television and thinking the record number of blows they unfurled that night would stand for a long time and it did until last September 1.

Macias, 27, was a very crude fighter when he first stepped into the ring five years ago at the Doubletree Hotel on a Thompson Boxing Promotions card. During the introduction he seemed out of place but wildly amused at being introduced to the crowd. It was like watching Sacha Cohen doing one of his Borat performances.

When the first bell rang the rat-tailed Macias stormed forward with windmill punches and withstood every return blow from his opponent that night. Though he lacked skill, he definitely showed strength and determination. He also had unlimited stamina or the term MMA fighters fondly like to use “cardio.”

For two years I saw all of Macias fights that took place in Southern California. And every time I expected him to lose. But every time he fought, the wild looking fighter from the desert area smiled his way to victory while the opponent seemed bewildered by the dizzying amount of incoming blows.

I lost sight of Macias for two years as he ventured out of state against better competition. When I saw him against Cabrera last September it was apparent that he had polished up his act. Slipping punches and moving into different angles was now part of his game. But throwing an avalanche of punches still was his forte.

“I’ve had to learn through all these fights,” said Macias a tireless worker. “Hardest part is maintaining the weight. Just keeping our body fueled.”

Facing Macias will be another tireless worker in Soto Karass who now makes Southern California his home. For the past decade the native of Los Mochis, Mexico has served as a litmus test for any fighter with world title aspirations.

Soto Karass has collected a bundle of scalps including wins over Andre Berto, Selcuk Aydin and many other once sparkling prospects in the past. He also is capable of raining blows like one of those tropical storms that batter the west coast of Mexico.

Macias loves to fight. He has one simple philosophy:

“It’s pretty much like a fighting rooster moving forward throw 100 to 150 punches,” said Macias. “They throw one, you throw three or four.”

It’s must watch television for fight fans.

Yuriorkis Gamboa

Gamboa (28-2, 17KOs) meets Mexico’s Miguel Beltran Jr. (33-6, 22 KOs) in a 10-round main event on Saturday Nov. 10, at Miami-Dade County Fair & Expo in Miami, Florida. The fight card will be available on Integrated Sports pay-per-view for $24.95. It can also be watched via streaming at www.fite.tv.

The proud Cuban fighter hasn’t fought in a year and has moved from promoter to promoter so he decided to do it himself. He is co-promoting this fight card.

Gamboa, 36, is gambling on himself with this pay-per-view card that also features former world champion Juan Manuel Lopez of Puerto Rico.

“My plan is to win this fight. I’ve prepared very well,” said Gamboa while in Las Vegas last September. “If Juanma does well and I do well we are looking to fight each other in a title fight. Both of us have won many world titles.”

Lopez (35-6, 32 KOs) a southpaw slugger, has bazookas in those gloves and faces Argentina’s Cristian Mino (19-2, 17 KOs) who also has heavy hands. Their match is set for 10 rounds in the lightweight division. Now 35, Lopez has lost six of his last 11 fights including his clash against fellow Boricua, Jayson Velez by knockout.

Does he have enough left?

Chocolatito and Braekhus in L.A.

360 Promotions held a media day for former four-division world champion Roman “Chocolatito” Gonzalez and current undisputed female welterweight world champion Cecilia Braekhus at the Palm Restaurant on Wednesday.

Gonzalez and Braekhus will headline the final HBO boxing telecast ever on Dec. 8, from the StubHub Center in Carson, Calif. Both have fought there before.

HBO launched the first women’s fight featuring Braekhus last May 5th at the same venue when she fought Kali Reis in a spirited fight that attracted more than 900,000 viewers during that fight.

Braekhus said she has multiple attractive foes to choose from including Amanda Serrano, Jessica McCaskill or Hanna Gabriels. One monster opponent was unattainable and that was Claressa Shields who allegedly opted to fight on Nov. 17, against Hannah Rankin on DAZN, said an HBO executive.

“We have so many great fighters to choose,” said Braekhus who is training in Los Angeles for this fight. “This fight will be at 147 pounds.”

Gonzalez already has an opponent and he will be facing Mexico’s Pedro Guevara in a 10 round super flyweight match.

“All the Mexican fighters punch well and are good fighters,” said Gonzalez. In his last fight he knocked out Mexico’s Moises Fuentes in the fifth round.

Once again, this will be the last time HBO televises a boxing match.

“It’s going to be a great night of boxing,” said HBO’s Tony Walker. “L.A. is the biggest boxing market in the world.”

Tickets go on sale next week.

Return of Neno

After nearly two years in purgatory Saul “Neno” Rodriguez returned and showcased the electrifying punching power harbored in both of his fists. The undefeated Riverside prizefighter returned with a knockout win over Argentina’s Claudio Tapia in the second round.

The first two knockdowns were delivered by right hands and the closing knockout came via the left hook. That’s his money punch.

Rodriguez, 25, still has plenty of time to hone his defense before stepping up in class against the likes of the two fighters who participated in the main event on the same card in El Paso.

“I felt fine. Just felt a bit of ring rust,” said Rodriguez (22-0-1, 16 KOs) who plans to compete in the super featherweight class. “I’m happy to be back active again and I’ll be fighting soon.”

On the same card, WBC super featherweight titlist Miguel Berchelt knocked out Mickey Roman after nine heated rounds in the Texas boxing ring. Fighting for the super featherweight world title is a goal of Rodriguez who knows he needs rounds before tangling against the champions.

Top Rank’s Brad Goodman said he expects Rodriguez to have two or three more fights before increasing the competition.

“There’s no rush,” said Goodman. “No rush at all. We like what he brings.”

Check out more boxing news on video at The Boxing Channel

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Cardoso, Nunez, and Akitsugi Bring Home the Bacon in Plant City

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The final ShoBox event of 2025 played out tonight at the company’s regular staging ground in Plant City, Florida. When the smoke cleared, the “A-side” fighters in the featured bouts were 3-0 in step-up fights vs. battle-tested veterans, two of whom were former world title challengers. However, the victors in none of the three fights, with the arguable exception of lanky bantamweight Katsuma Akitsugi, made any great gain in public esteem.

In the main event, a lightweight affair, Jonhatan Cardoso, a 25-year-old Brazilian, earned a hard-fought, 10-round unanimous decision over Los Mochis, Mexico southpaw Eduardo Ramirez.  The decision would have been acceptable to most neutral observers if it had been deemed a draw, but the Brazilian won by scores of 97-93 and 96-94 twice.

Cardoso, now 18-1 (15), had the crowd in his corner., This was his fourth straight appearance in Plant City. Ramirez, disadvantaged by being the smaller man with a shorter reach, declined to 28-5-3.

Co-Feature

In a 10-round featherweight fight that had no indelible moments, Luis Reynaldo Nunez advanced to 20-0 (13) with a workmanlike 10-round unanimous decision over Mexico’s Leonardo Baez. The judges had it 99-91 and 98-92 twice.

Nunez, from the Dominican Republic, is an economical fighter who fights behind a tight guard. Reputedly 85-5 as an amateur, he is managed by Sampson Lewkowicz who handles David Benavidez among others and trained by Bob Santos. Baez (22-5) was returning to the ring after a two-year hiatus.

Also

In a contest slated for “10,” ever-improving bantamweight Katsuma Akitsugi improved to 12-0 (3 KOs) with a sixth-round stoppage of Filipino import Aston Palicte (28-7-1). Akitsugi caught Palicte against the ropes and unleashed a flurry of punches climaxed by a right hook. Palicte went down and was unable to beat the count. The official time was 1:07 of round six.

This was the third straight win by stoppage for Akitsugi, a 27-year-old southpaw who trains at Freddie Roach’s Wild Card gym in LA under Roach’s assistant Eddie Hernandez. Palicte, who had been out of the ring for 16 months, is a former two-time world title challenger at superflyweight (115).

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Introducing Jaylan Phillips, Boxing’s Palindrome Man

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On Thursday, Nov. 28, as Americans hunkered down at the dinner table with family and friends for our annual Thanksgiving Day feast, junior welterweight Jaylan Phillips and his trainer Kevin Henry were up in the sky flying from Las Vegas to Rochester, New York. For their Thanksgiving repast, they were offered a tiny bag of peanuts.

Phillips would not have eaten too much had the opportunity presented itself. The next day was the weigh-in. On Saturday, the 30th, he would compete in the 6-round main event of a small club show.

Phillips wasn’t brought to Rochester to win. His opponent, Wilfredo Flores, had a checkered career but he had once held a regional title and he lived in the general area. In boxing parlance, Jaylan Phillips was the “B” side. His role, from the promoter’s standpoint, was to fatten the record of the house fighter.

Jaylan didn’t follow the script. He won a unanimous decision over his 11-3-1 opponent, advancing his record to 4-3-4, and returned to Las Vegas with a new nickname, albeit not one of his own choosing or intended as a permanent accessory. This reporter dubbed him The Palindrome Man.

A palindrome is a word that spells the same backward and forward. Phillips’ current record is palindrome-ish.

It’s an odd record. One would be hard-pressed to find other active boxers with a slew of draws inside a small window of fights. It harks to the days, circa 1900, when some journeymen boxers accumulated as many draws as wins and losses combined.

A boxer with a 4-3-4 record would seem to be an unlikely candidate for a feature story, but the affable Jaylan Phillips is not your run-of-the-mill prizefighter.

Boxers, as we know, tend to be city folk, drawn from the black belts and the barrios of America’s urban places. Phillips grew up in Ebro, Florida, population 237 per the 2020 U.S. census. Ebro is in the Florida panhandle in the northwestern part of the state in a county that was dry until 2022. It is 23 miles due north of Panama City Beach but a world apart from the seaside Florida resort town and its pricey beachfront condos.

Of those 237 people, only five identified as African-American or black, or so it would be written, but the census-taker was obviously slothful. “That’s a crazy number,” says Phillips. “There has to be at least 40 or 50. And the reason I know that is that we are all related.”

“What does one do for excitement in Ebro?” we asked him. “Hunting, fishing, trapping, that sort of thing,” he said. And what does one trap? “Mostly raccoons,” he said, while adding that some of the elders in his extended family consider it a delicacy.

Phillips fought in Rochester, New York, on Saturday and was back in the gym in Las Vegas on Tuesday. He lives alone and does not own a car. His apartment, near UNLV, is three-and-a-half miles from the Top Rank Gym where he does most of his training. He jogs there and then jogs home again, this in a city where the temperature routinely exceeds 100 degrees for much of the year.

During his high school years, Phillips, now 25, concedes that he smoked a lot of weed and it impacted his grades. His interest in boxing was fueled by the exploits of Roy Jones Jr, another fighter with roots in the Florida panhandle. In his spare time, he enjoys watching tapes of old Sugar Ray Robinson fights which can be found on youtube. “He was the best,” says Phillips of Robinson who has been dead for 35 years, echoing an opinion that hasn’t diminished with the passage of time.

In his second pro fight, Phillips was thrust against a baby-faced novice from Cleveland, Abdullah Mason. Although Mason was only 17 years old, the Top Rank matchmaker did Jaylan no favors. He was still standing when the referee waived the fight off in the second round.

About the heavily-hyped Mason, Phillips says, “He’s a beast, like they say, but I would love to fight him again. I took that fight on two weeks’ notice. I’m confident the outcome would have been different if I had had a full camp.”

This observation will undoubtedly strike some as a delusion. Pound for pound, the precocious Mason just may be the top pro fighter in the world in his age group. But Jaylan isn’t lacking confidence which spills over when he talks about what lies ahead for him. “I will be a world champion,” he says matter-of-factly. And after boxing? “I see myself back home in Ebro living a humble life, hunting and fishing, but with a million dollars in the bank.”

If unswerving dedication and self-confidence are the keys to a successful boxing career, then Jaylan Phillips, notwithstanding his 4-3-4 record, is destined for big things. But here’s the rub:

“In boxing, it isn’t what you earn, but what you negotiate,” says the esteemed British boxing pundit Steve Bunce alluding to the importance of a well-connected manager. In a perfect world, each win would be stepping-stone to a bigger fight with a commensurately larger purse. But in this chaotic sport, a “B side” fighter who scores an upset in a low-level fight may actually be penalized for his “impertinence.” Promoters may be wary of using him again (the old “risk/reward” encumbrance) and, in a sport where it’s important for an up-and-comer to stay busy, his progress may be stalled.

Phillips doesn’t know when his next assignment will materialize, but regardless he will keep plugging along while setting an example that others who aspire to greatness would be wise to emulate.

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Emanuel Navarrete and Rafael Espinoza Shine in Phoenix

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Emanuel Navarrete and Rafael Espinoza Shine in Phoenix

PHOENIX – Saturday was a busy night on the global boxing scene, and it’s quite likely that the howling attendees in Phoenix’s Footprint Center witnessed the finest overall card of the international schedule. The many Mexican flags on display in the packed, scaled down arena signaled the event’s theme.

Co-main events featured rematches that arose from a pair of prior crowd-pleasing slugfests. Each of tonight’s headlining bouts ended at the halfway point, but that was their only similarity.

Emanuel “Vaquero” Navarrete, now 39-2-1 (32), defended his WBO Junior Lightweight belt with a dramatic stoppage of more-than-willing Oscar Valdez, 32-3 (24). The 29-year-old champion spoke of retirement wishes, but after dominating a blazing battle in which he scored three knockdowns, his only focus was relaxing during the holidays then getting back to what sounded like long-term business.

“Valdez was extremely tough in this fight,” said Navarrete. “I knew I had to push him back and I did. You are now witnessing the second phase of my career and you can expect great things from me in 2025.”

“I don’t really know about the future,” said the crestfallen, 33-year-old Valdez. “No excuses. He did what he wanted to and I couldn’t.”

Navarrete, a three-division titlist, came up one scorecard short of a fourth belt in his previous fight last May, a split decision loss to Denys Berinchyk. This was Navarrete’s fourth Arizona appearance so he was cheered like a homeboy, but Valdez was definitely the crowd favorite, evident from the cheers that erupted as both fighters were shown arriving in glistening, low rider automobiles.

Both men came out throwing huge shots, but it was Navarrete who scored a flash knockdown in the first round, setting the tone for the rest of the fight. There was fierce action in every frame, with Navarrete getting the best of most of it, but even when he was in trouble Valdez roared back and brought the crowd to their feet. He got dropped again at the very end of round four, and Navarrete sent his mouthpiece into orbit the round after that.

When Navarrette drove Valdez into the ropes during round six it looked like referee Raul Caiz, Jr was about to intervene, but before he could decide, Navarrete finished matters himself with a perfect left to the ribs that crumpled Valdez into a KO at 2:42.

“He talked about getting ready to retire soon so I told him we had to fight again right now,” said Valdez prior to the rematch. There were numerous “be careful what you wish for” type predictions of doom and he entered the ring at around a two to one underdog, understanding the contest’s make or break stakes. “Boxing penalizes you if you have a lot of losses,” observed Valdez. “It’s not like other sports where you can lose and do better next season. In boxing, most people don’t want to see you again after a couple of losses.”

What Valdez might decide remains to be seen, but even in defeat he proved to be a warrior worth watching.

Co-Feature

After their epic, razor-close encounter almost exactly a year ago, it was obvious Rafael Espinoza, and fellow 30-year-old Robeisy Ramirez should meet again for the WBO featherweight title belt Espinoza earned by an upset majority decision. Espinoza turned the trick again this time around, inside the distance, but it was more anti-climactic than anything like toe-to-toe.

The 6’1” Espinoza, now 26-0 (22), was the aggressor from the opening frame, but 5’6” Ramirez, 14-3 (9) employed his short stature well to stay out of immediate danger and countered to the body for a slight edge. The Cuban challenger avoided much of their previous firefight and initially controlled the tempo. The crowd jeered him for staying away but it was an effective strategy, at least at first.

Espinoza connected much better in the fifth round and looked fresher as Ramirez’s face rapidly reddened. Suddenly, seemingly out of nowhere in round six, Ramirez took a punch then raised a glove in surrender. Whatever the reason, even looking at Ramirez’s swollen right eye, it looked like a “No Mas” moment. Replays showed a straight right to the eye socket, but that didn’t stop the crowd from hooting their disgust after ref Chris Flores signaled the end at 0:12.

***

Richard Torrez, Jr, now 12-0 (11), displayed his Olympic silver medal pedigree in a heavyweight bout against Issac Munoz, 18-2-1 (15). Torrez, 236.6, found his punching range quickly with southpaw leads as Munoz, 252, tried to stand his ground but looked hurt by early body work that forced him into the ropes. He was gasping for breath as Torrez peppered him in the second, and Munoz went back to his corner on unsteady legs.

Munoz’s team should have thought about saving him for another day in the third as he ate big shots. Luckily, referee Raul Caiz, Jr. was wiser and had seen enough, waving it off for a TKO at 0:59.

“I don’t train for the opponent,” reflected Torrez, who isn’t far from true contender status. “Every time I train, I train for a world championship fight.”

***

Super-lightweight Lindolfo Delgado, 139.9, improved to 22-0 (16), and took another step into the world title picture against Jackson Marinez, now 22-4 (10), 139.2.

On paper this junior welterweight matchup appeared fairly even, and Marinez managed to keep it that way for almost half the scheduled ten rounds against a solid prospect but Delgado kept upping the ante until Marinez was out of chips. The assembled swarm was whistling for more action after three tentative opening frames, as Delgado loaded up but couldn’t put much offense together.

That changed in the 4th when Delgado connected with solid crosses. In the fifth, a fine combination dropped Marinez into a delayed knockdown and a wicked follow-up right to the guts finished the wobbly Marinez, who had nothing to be ashamed of, off in the arms of ref Wes Melton. Official TKO time was 2:13.

In a matter of concurrent programming, Saturday also held a lot of highly publicized college football and basketball games which likely detracted from the larger mainstream audience and media coverage this fight card deserved. That’s a shame but you can’t fault boxing, Top Rank, or any of the fighters for that because, once again, they all came through big time in Phoenix.

Photos credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank

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