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Jose Zepeda Wins Knockdown Battle with Ivan Baranchyk at the MGM Bubble

Las Vegas was bombs away central as Jose “Chon” Zepeda traded knockdowns with Ivan “The Beast” Baranchyk and with the last punch won the probable “Fight of the Year” by vicious knockout on Saturday.
It was shocking and captivating at the same time.
“It was the first time I was in a fight like this,” said Zepeda, 31.
Inside the MGM Grand Bubble, Zepeda (33-2, 26 KOs) survived two first round knockdowns and slugged his way out of trouble against Belarus strongman Baranchyk (20-2, 13 KOs) in a war of knockdowns that showed the beauty and brutality of prizefighting.
Both entered the ring with losses to the current super lightweight titlists and looking to regain status.
Zepeda had lost to WBC/WBO titlist Jose Carlos Ramirez in a close scrap and was eager to prove he was title-worthy. Baranchyk lost to IBF titlist Josh Taylor and felt he could redeem himself with a win. Both had no intentions of moving backwards.
Immediately Baranchyk scored two knockdowns in the first round against Zepeda as both were eager to prove the other could not take their power. It was machismo at its best. Zepeda got up after the knockdowns eager to exchange again.
In the next round Zepeda floored Baranchyk but it was not ruled a knockdown by referee Kenny Bayless. No matter, Zepeda dropped him again with a right and left. When the fight resumed Zepeda was too eager and was caught by a Baranchyk left hook. He got up too.
Neither fighter was willing to give in and neither looking for an easy round. In the third frame Zepeda caught Baranchyk with a combination during an exchange and down he went again. But once again he got up.
In between rounds you could see both fighters were confident they could end the night with just the right punch. But what punch and who would land the telling blow?
It was like playing Russian roulette.
Zepeda and Baranchyk exchanged back and forth and seldom looked for the easy way out. Each looked to score with his best blow in the fourth round. Down went Baranchyk again from a Zepeda connect, but up he jumped back to his feet.
It was just a matter of time before one or the other landed the perfect punch.
In the fifth round Zepeda seemed to feel he had taken part of Baranchyk’s strength away with his knockdown in the earlier round. The Mexican-American fighter eagerly went into attack mode but was caught by a Baranchyk roundhouse right that sent Zepeda into the ropes. Referee Kenny Bayless correctly called it a knockdown and gave the Mexican fighter an eight count.
The fight resumed.
As Baranchyk moved into follow-up with his attack, Zepeda countered with a perfectly timed left cross to the chin and down went the Belarussian fighter in sections. He was out before he hit the canvas. Zepeda had incredibly won with the last blow of the fight at 2:50 of the fifth round.
It took several tense minutes before Baranchyk got up. Finally, those watching at the arena and on their mobile devices could breathe again with relief.
But what a war.
“I feel great because I won the fight. It was a hard fight. Man, boxing is hard, its no easy game,” said Zepeda. “You better give it 100 percent because it’s probably the hardest sport.”
Once again prizefighting also proved why it’s the most beautiful sport.
LA Fights
Anytime Philadelphia battles East L.A. you can expect an extremely good fight and that’s what happened in the PBC on Fox fight card at the Microsoft Theater in downtown Los Angeles.
Philly welterweight Paul Kroll (8-0, 6 KOs) emerged the winner by unanimous decision over East L.A.’s Luke Santamaria (11-2-1, 7 KOs) after 10 rounds but it surely did not look like the scores indicated. According to two judges Kroll won every round but one.
Santamaria was the busier fighter in almost every round and nearly scored a knockdown from a body shot in the second round. His movement and switching back and forth from southpaw to orthodox left Kroll befuddled and unable to use combination punching.
Later in the fight, Kroll adapted and began firing more blows, but no round was ever dominated by either fighter. After 10 rounds two judges scored it 99-91 and a third 96-94, all for Kroll. It very well could have been a draw.
A featherweight fight saw Mark Magsayo (21-0) escape by split decision over Rigoberto Hermosillo (11-3-1) after a slow start.
Magsayo is signed by Manny Pacquiao Promotions and trained by Freddie Roach.
Photo credit: Mikey Williams / TopRank
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Mercito Gesta Victorious Over Jojo Diaz at the Long Beach Pyramid

LONG BEACH, CA.-Those in the know knew Mercito Gesta and Jojo Diaz would be a fight to watch and they delivered.
Gesta emerged the winner in a super lightweight clash between southpaws that saw the judges favor his busier style over Diaz’s body attack and bigger shots and win by split decision on Saturday.
Despite losing the main event because the star was overweight, Gesta (34-3-3, 17 KOs) used an outside method of tactic to edge past former world champion Diaz (32-4-1, 15 KOs) in front of more than 5,000 fans at the Pyramid.
The speedy Gesta opened up the fight with combination punching up and down against the peek-a-boo style of Diaz. For the first two rounds the San Diego fighter overwhelmed Diaz though none of the blows were impactful.
In the third round Diaz finally began unloading his own combinations and displaying the fast hands that helped him win world titles in two divisions. Gesta seemed stunned by the blows, but his chin held up. The counter right hook was Diaz’s best weapon and snapped Gesta’s head back several times.
Gesta regained control in the fifth round after absorbing big blows from Diaz. He seemed to get angry that he was hurt and opened up with even more blows to send Diaz backpedaling.
Diaz targeted his attack to Gesta’s body and that seemed to slow down Gesta. But only for a round.
From the seventh until the 10th each fighter tried to impose their style with Gesta opening up with fast flurries and Diaz using right hooks to connect with solid shots. They continued their method of attack until the final bell. All that mattered was what the judges preferred.
After 10 rounds one judge saw Diaz the winner 97-93 but two others saw Gesta the winner 99-91, 98-92. It was a close and interesting fight.
“I was expecting nothing. I was the victor in this fight and we gave a good fight,” said Gesta. “It’s not an easy fight and Jojo gave his best.”
Diaz was surprised by the outcome but accepted the verdict.
Everything was going good. I thought I was landing good body shots,” said Diaz. “I was pretty comfortable.”
Other Bouts
Mexico’s Oscar Duarte (25-1-1, 20 KOs) knocked out Chicago’s Alex Martin (18-5, 6 KOs) with a counter right hand after dropping him earlier in the fourth round. The super lightweight fight was stopped at 1:14 of the round.
A battle between undefeated super welterweights saw Florida’s Eric Tudor (8-0, 6 KOs) emerge the winner by unanimous decision after eight rounds versus Oakland’s Damoni Cato-Cain.
The taller Tudor showed polished skill and was not bothered by a large cut on his forehead caused by an accidental clash of heads. He used his jab and lead rights to defuse the attacks of the quick-fisted southpaw Cato-Cain. The judges scored the fight 80-72 and 78-74 twice for Tudor.
San Diego’s Jorge Chavez (5-0, 4 KOs) needed less than one round to figure out Nicaragua’s Bryan Perez (12-17-1, 11 KOs) and send him into dreamland with a three-punch combination. No need to count as referee Ray Corona waved the fight over. Perez shot a vicious right followed by another right and then a see-you-later left hook at 3.00 of the first round of the super featherweight match.
Photo credit: Al Applerose
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Jojo Diaz’s Slump Continues; Mercito Gesta Prevails on a Split Decision

At age 30, Jojo Diaz’s career is on the skids. The 2012 U.S. Olympian, a former world title holder at 126 and 130 pounds and an interim title holder at 135, Diaz suffered his third straight loss tonight, upset by Mercito Gesta who won a split decision at the Walter Pyramid in Long Beach, CA.. The scoring was strange with Gesta winning nine of the 10 rounds on one of the cards and only three rounds on another. The tie-breaker, as it were, was a 98-92 tally for Gesta and even that didn’t capture the flavor of what was a closely-contested fight.
Originally listed as a 12-rounder, the match was reduced to 10 and that, it turned out, did Diaz no favors. However, it’s hard to feel sorry for the former Olympian as he came in overweight once again, having lost his 130-pound title on the scales in February of 2021.
Diaz also has issues outside the ropes. Best elucidated by prominent boxing writer Jake Donovan, they include a cluster of legal problems stemming from an arrest for drunk driving on Feb. 27 in the LA suburb of Claremont.
With the defeat, Diaz’s ledger declined to 32-4-1. His prior losses came at the hands of Gary Russell Jr, Devin Haney, and William Zepeda, boxers who are collectively 83-2. Mercito Gesta, a 35-year-old San Diego-based Filipino, improved to 34-3-3.
Co-Feature
Chihuahua, Mexico super lightweight Oscar Duarte has now won nine straight inside the distance after stopping 33-year-old Chicago southpaw Alex Martin in the eighth frame. Duarte, the busier fighter, had Martin on the deck twice in round eight before the fight was waived off.
Duarte improved to 25-1-1 (20). Martin, who reportedly won six national titles as an amateur and was once looked upon as a promising prospect, declined to 18-5.
Other Bouts of Note
New Golden Boy signee Eric Tudor, a 21-year-old super welterweight from Fort Lauderdale, overcame a bad laceration over his right eye, the result of an accidental clash of heads in round four, to stay unbeaten, advancing to 8-0 (6) with a hard-fought unanimous 8-round decision over Oakland’s Damoni Cato-Cain. The judges had it 80-72 and 78-74 twice. It was the first pro loss for Cato-Cain (7-1-1) who had his first five fights in Tijuana.
In the DAZN opener, lanky Hawaian lightweight Dalis Kaleiopu went the distance for the first time in his young career, improving to 4-0 (3) with a unanimous decision over 36-year-old Colombian trial horse Jonathan Perez (40-35). The scores were 60-52 across the board. There were no knockdowns, but Perez, who gave up almost six inches in height, had a point deducted for a rabbit punch and another point for deducted for holding.
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‘Big Baby’ Wins the Battle of Behemoths; TKOs ‘Big Daddy’ in 6

Lucas “Big Daddy” Browne weighed in at a career-high 277 pounds for today’s battle in Dubai with Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller, but he was the lighter man by 56 pounds. It figured that one or both would gas out if the bout lasted more than a few stanzas.
It was a war of attrition with both men looking exhausted at times, and when the end came it was Miller, at age 34 the younger man by nine years, who had his hand raised.
Browne was the busier man, but Miller, whose physique invites comparison with a rhinoceros, hardly blinked as he was tattooed with an assortment of punches. He hurt ‘Bid Daddy’ in round four, but the Aussie held his own in the next frame, perhaps even forging ahead on the cards, but only postponing the inevitable.
In round six, a succession of right hands knocked Browne on the seat of his pants. He beat the count, but another barrage from Miller impelled the referee to intervene. The official time was 2:33. It was the 21st straight win for Miller (26-0-1, 22 KOs). Browne declined to 31-4 and, for his own sake, ought not fight again. All four of his losses have come inside the distance, some brutally.
The consensus of those that caught the livestream was that Floyd Mayweather Jr’s commentary was an annoying distraction that marred what was otherwise an entertaining show.
As for what’s next for “Big Baby” Miller, that’s hard to decipher as he has burned his bridges with the sport’s most powerful promoters. One possibility is Mahmoud Charr who, like Miller, has a big gap in his boxing timeline. Now 38 years old, Charr – who has a tenuous claim on a WBA world title (don’t we all?) — has reportedly taken up residence in Dubai.
Other Bouts of Note
In a 10-round cruiserweight affair, Suslan Asbarov, a 30-year-old Russian, advanced to 4-0 (1) with a hard-fought majority decision over Brandon Glanton. The judges had it 98-92, 97-93, and a more reasonable 95-95.
Asbarov was 12-9 in documented amateur fights and 1-0 in a sanctioned bare-knuckle fight, all in Moscow, entering this match. He bears watching, however, as Glanton (18-2) would be a tough out for almost anyone in his weight class. In his previous fight, at Plant City, Florida, Glanton lost a controversial decision to David Light, an undefeated Australian who challenges WBO world title-holder Lawrence Okolie at Manchester, England next week.
A 10-round super featherweight match between former world title challengers Jono Carroll and Miguel Marriaga preceded the semi-windup. Carroll, a 30-year-old Dublin southpaw, overcame a cut over his left eye suffered in the second round to win a wide unanimous decision in a fairly entertaining fight.
It was the sixth straight win for Carroll (24-2-1, 7 KOs) who elevated his game after serving as a sparring partner for Devin Haney. Marriaga, a 36-year-old Colombian, lost for the fourth time in his last five outings, declining to 30-7.
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