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The Guardian
2 days ago
- Sport
- The Guardian
Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion
Xander Zayas's coronation is complete. The 22-year-old who has long been put forth as Puerto Rico's next boxing star became the sport's youngest active world champion on Saturday night, defeating Mexico's Jorge Garcia Perez by a comfortable 12-round unanimous decision to claim the vacant WBO junior middleweight title. The stakes couldn't have been clearer for Zayas, a prodigy who turned professional at 17 and has since plotted a measured ascent through the ranks. With the clear-cut victory before a rollicking crowd of several thousand at the Theater at Madison Square Garden, Zayas made good on years of promise while penning another chapter into the storied Puerto Rico–Mexico rivalry. The bout was not the formality that some had envisioned. The wiry Garcia, an awkward and unpredictable foe, disrupted Zayas's rhythm early with lunging attacks and roughhouse tactics. But the younger man's superior timing, footwork and hand speed gradually took over. Zayas began beating Garcia to the punch with sharp counters and crisp combinations, breaking him down to the body and head while staying in control against the erratic threat in front of him. The most frenetic two-way action broke out in the sixth with both men trading hellfire in the center of the ring and Zayas getting the better of the exchanges. There were few moments of real jeopardy, but Garcia made him work for every round. He buzzed Zayas with a flush left hook in the third and rallied late with a flurry in the 10th, but each time Zayas responded with discipline and composure. In the end, the ringside judges scored it 119-109, 118-110 and 116-112 in his favor. (The Guardian had it 117-111.) 'That's what it's all about: growth,' an elated Zayas said afterward. 'You guys have seen me since I was 16 years old. You've seen the elevation in my game. Today wasn't the exception. He came to fight. We knew he was coming to fight. We needed to keep him at distance and that's what we did. We frustrated him.' Garcia (33-5, 26 KOs), who earned his shot with an upset of Charles Conwell by split decision in April, proved durable and determined but lacked the tools to solve Zayas's blend of poise, precision and ringcraft. He landed 130 of 603 punches (21.6%), according to Compubox's punch statistics, compared to 199 of 522 for his opponent (38.1%). For Zayas (22-0, 14 KOs), the win completed a journey that began more than 15 years ago in a San Juan boxing gym, where his mother brought him to learn how to defend himself from bullies. Within months, he was a local sensation. At 10, he'd already declared his professional ambitions. That path accelerated after his family moved to Sunrise, Florida, where he came under the tutelage of trainer Javiel Centeno, a mentee of the great Angelo Dundee. 'My mom is my hero,' Zayas said. 'She made it happen. All this is because of her. She never quit on me. She always told me I was going to be a world champion and she made everything happen, [made] everything possible. We moved out of Puerto Rico to chase that dream and it's finally here at 22.' Zayas grew up studying the Puerto Rican fistic icons – Tito Trinidad, Macho Camacho, Wilfredo Benitez – and idolized Miguel Cotto, whose fights became family rituals. That legacy was always his north star. On Saturday, it came full circle: in the same city where Cotto had his greatest nights, against a Mexican flag-bearer, Zayas became Puerto Rico's next great hope. The belt he won Saturday may be just the beginning. At 22, Zayas has time, talent and a devoted fanbase on his side. The 154lb division is stacked with challenges and unification opportunities, the kind of fights that will reveal how high he can climb. 'Anybody in the division can get it now,' Zayas said. 'There's no running. I'm a world champion, and I have what they want.' Zayas was long seen by many as a polished, likable prospect, but questions remain as the first chapter of his career comes to a close. Does he have the power to hurt the division's elite? Is he pound-for-pound material or a well-managed belt-holder who might fall short at the highest level? Saturday wasn't the night for those answers. Instead it was the night a 22-year-old from San Juan by way of Sunrise fulfilled a lifelong dream and made his first mark on Puerto Rican boxing's ocean-deep lore. 'That's my new baby,' Zayas said, giving a gentle caress to the bejeweled trophy draped over his shoulder early Sunday morning. 'I'm sleeping with it tonight. Might sleep with it the whole week. It feels amazing. I worked hard for this. Almost 20 years as a boxer, six as a professional. The hard work finally paid off. I told everybody I was made for this. This was my moment. And we made it happen.'
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion
Xander Zayas's coronation is complete. The 22-year-old who has long been put forth as Puerto Rico's next boxing star became the sport's youngest active world champion on Saturday night, defeating Mexico's Jorge Garcia Perez by a unanimous decision to claim the vacant WBO junior middleweight title. The stakes couldn't have been clearer for Zayas, a prodigy who turned professional at 17 and has since made a measured ascent through the ranks. With the victory before a rollicking crowd of several thousand at the Theater at Madison Square Garden, Zayas made good on years of promise while penning another chapter into the storied Puerto Rico–Mexico rivalry. The bout was not the formality that some had envisioned. The wiry Garcia, an awkward and unpredictable foe, disrupted Zayas's rhythm early with lunging attacks and roughhouse tactics. But the younger man's superior timing, footwork and hand speed gradually took over. Zayas began beating Garcia to the punch with sharp counters and crisp combinations, breaking him down to the body and head while staying in control against the erratic threat in front of him. There were few moments of real jeopardy, but Garcia made him work for every round. He buzzed Zayas with a flush left hook in the third and rallied late with a flurry in the 10th, but each time Zayas responded with composure. In the end, the ringside judges scored it 119-109, 118-110 and 116-112 in his favor. (The Guardian had it 117-111.) 'That's what it's all about: growth,' an elated Zayas said afterward. 'You guys have seen me since I was 16 years old. You've seen the elevation in my game. Today wasn't the exception. He came to fight. We knew he was coming to fight. We needed to keep him at distance and that's what we did. We frustrated him.' Garcia (33-5, 26 KOs), who earned his shot with an upset of Charles Conwell by 12-round split decision in April, proved durable and determined but lacked the tools to solve Zayas's blend of poise, precision and ringcraft. He landed 130 of 603 punches (21.6%), according to Compubox's punch statistics, compared to 199 of 522 for his opponent (38.1%). For Zayas (22-0, 14 KOs), the win completed a journey that began more than 15 years ago in a San Juan boxing gym, where his mother brought him to learn how to defend himself from bullies. Within months, he was a local sensation. At 10, he'd already declared his professional ambitions. That path accelerated after his family moved to Sunrise, Florida, where he came under the tutelage of trainer Javiel Centeno, a mentee of the great Angelo Dundee. 'My mom is my hero,' Zayas said. 'She made it happen. All this is because of her. She never quit on me. She always told me I was going to be a world champion and she made everything happen, everything possible. We moved out of Puerto Rico to chase that dream and it's finally here at 22.' Zayas grew up studying the Puerto Rican fistic icons – Tito Trinidad, Macho Camacho, Wilfredo Benitez – and idolized Miguel Cotto, whose fights became family rituals. That legacy was always his north star. On Saturday, it came full circle: in the same city where Cotto had his greatest nights, against a Mexican flag-bearer, Zayas became Puerto Rico's next great hope. The belt he won Saturday may be just the beginning. At 22, Zayas has time, talent and a devoted fanbase on his side. The 154lb division is stacked with challenges and unification opportunities, the kind of fights that will reveal how high he can climb. 'Anybody in the division can get it now,' Zayas said. 'There's no running. I'm a world champion, and I have what they want.' Zayas was long seen by many as a polished, likable prospect, but questions remain as the first chapter of his career comes to a close. Does he have the power to hurt the division's elite? Is he pound-for-pound material or a well-managed belt-holder who might fall short at the highest level? Saturday wasn't the night for those answers. Instead it was the night a 22-year-old from San Juan by way of Sunrise fulfilled a lifelong dream and made his first mark on Puerto Rican boxing's ocean-deep lore. 'That's my new baby,' Zayas said, giving his bejeweled trophy a gentle squeeze early Sunday morning. 'I'm sleeping with it tonight. Might sleep with it the whole week. It feels amazing. I worked hard for this. Almost 20 years as a boxer, six as a professional. The hard work finally paid off. I told everybody I was made for this. This was my moment. And we made it happen.'


The Guardian
2 days ago
- Sport
- The Guardian
Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion
Xander Zayas's coronation is complete. The 22-year-old who has long been put forth as Puerto Rico's next boxing star became the sport's youngest active world champion on Saturday night, defeating Mexico's Jorge Garcia Perez by a unanimous decision to claim the vacant WBO junior middleweight title. The stakes couldn't have been clearer for Zayas, a prodigy who turned professional at 17 and has since made a measured ascent through the ranks. With the victory before a rollicking crowd of several thousand at the Theater at Madison Square Garden, Zayas made good on years of promise while penning another chapter into the storied Puerto Rico–Mexico rivalry. The bout was not the formality that some had envisioned. The wiry Garcia, an awkward and unpredictable foe, disrupted Zayas's rhythm early with lunging attacks and roughhouse tactics. But the younger man's superior timing, footwork and hand speed gradually took over. Zayas began beating Garcia to the punch with sharp counters and crisp combinations, breaking him down to the body and head while staying in control against the erratic threat in front of him. There were few moments of real jeopardy, but Garcia made him work for every round. He buzzed Zayas with a flush left hook in the third and rallied late with a flurry in the 10th, but each time Zayas responded with composure. In the end, the ringside judges scored it 119-109, 118-110 and 116-112 in his favor. (The Guardian had it 117-111.) 'That's what it's all about: growth,' an elated Zayas said afterward. 'You guys have seen me since I was 16 years old. You've seen the elevation in my game. Today wasn't the exception. He came to fight. We knew he was coming to fight. We needed to keep him at distance and that's what we did. We frustrated him.' Garcia (33-5, 26 KOs), who earned his shot with an upset of Charles Conwell by 12-round split decision in April, proved durable and determined but lacked the tools to solve Zayas's blend of poise, precision and ringcraft. He landed 130 of 603 punches (21.6%), according to Compubox's punch statistics, compared to 199 of 522 for his opponent (38.1%). For Zayas (22-0, 14 KOs), the win completed a journey that began more than 15 years ago in a San Juan boxing gym, where his mother brought him to learn how to defend himself from bullies. Within months, he was a local sensation. At 10, he'd already declared his professional ambitions. That path accelerated after his family moved to Sunrise, Florida, where he came under the tutelage of trainer Javiel Centeno, a mentee of the great Angelo Dundee. 'My mom is my hero,' Zayas said. 'She made it happen. All this is because of her. She never quit on me. She always told me I was going to be a world champion and she made everything happen, everything possible. We moved out of Puerto Rico to chase that dream and it's finally here at 22.' Zayas grew up studying the Puerto Rican fistic icons – Tito Trinidad, Macho Camacho, Wilfredo Benitez – and idolized Miguel Cotto, whose fights became family rituals. That legacy was always his north star. On Saturday, it came full circle: in the same city where Cotto had his greatest nights, against a Mexican flag-bearer, Zayas became Puerto Rico's next great hope. The belt he won Saturday may be just the beginning. At 22, Zayas has time, talent and a devoted fanbase on his side. The 154lb division is stacked with challenges and unification opportunities, the kind of fights that will reveal how high he can climb. 'Anybody in the division can get it now,' Zayas said. 'There's no running. I'm a world champion, and I have what they want.' Zayas was long seen by many as a polished, likable prospect, but questions remain as the first chapter of his career comes to a close. Does he have the power to hurt the division's elite? Is he pound-for-pound material or a well-managed belt-holder who might fall short at the highest level? Saturday wasn't the night for those answers. Instead it was the night a 22-year-old from San Juan by way of Sunrise fulfilled a lifelong dream and made his first mark on Puerto Rican boxing's ocean-deep lore. 'That's my new baby,' Zayas said, giving his bejeweled trophy a gentle squeeze early Sunday morning. 'I'm sleeping with it tonight. Might sleep with it the whole week. It feels amazing. I worked hard for this. Almost 20 years as a boxer, six as a professional. The hard work finally paid off. I told everybody I was made for this. This was my moment. And we made it happen.'


New York Times
3 days ago
- Sport
- New York Times
How to watch Top Rank Boxing's TV finale: Xander Zayas, Jorge Garcia battle for world title
Rising Puerto Rican star Xander Zayas will take on Mexican veteran Jorge Garcia this Saturday at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Perhaps more significant after the final bell, which will crown a new WBO junior middleweight world champion, is that this main event will be the final Top Rank boxing show on ESPN. Advertisement Here's how to watch it live. Live coverage is also available on ESPN+. Top Rank and ESPN decided to have their final fight card together, showcasing perhaps their hottest prospect in the former's half-century of existence as a boxing promotion. In 2019, then 16-year-old Zayas became the youngest signee in Top Rank history, a company that has promoted greats like Muhammad Ali and Manny Pacquiao. Now 22, Zayas (21-0, 13 KOs) looks to win his first world title since turning pro six years ago. He faces upset-minded 28-year-old Garcia (33-4, 26 KOs). On the undercard is 2023 Ring Magazine Prospect of the Year Bruce 'Shu Shu' Carrington (15-0, 9 KOs). Carrington, 28, takes on Mateus Heita for the WBC interim featherweight world title. After Saturday's fights, it will be the first time in more than 80 years that boxing will not be shown on linear television in the United States. The first boxing TV broadcast in U.S. history was in 1939, a heavyweight bout between Max Baer and Lou Nova. Top Rank was the last major boxing promotion in the country that had a media rights deal with a 'mainstream' TV network. The boxing company's agreement with ESPN expires in August after the parties reached a seven-year deal in 2018. In those seven years, ESPN broadcast some of the biggest fights in the sport's history, including the second and third heavyweight title fights between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder. Other boxing promotions — such as Golden Boy, Premier Boxing Champions and Matchroom — have switched to streaming platforms like DAZN, Amazon Prime and Netflix to show their respective fighters. Top Rank has yet to announce a new broadcasting partner. Streaming and ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication. (Photo of Xander Zayas: Al Bello/ Getty Images)
Yahoo
12-07-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano's third and final act was a thing to behold
NEW YORK — Somewhere around the sixth round of Alycia Baumgardner's super featherweight title defense against Jennifer Miranda, the crowd kicked up to a sustained roar. It had nothing to do with the action of the fight. It had everything to do with anticipation of what was on deck. Up until that point, the Puerto Ricans who'd assembled at Madison Square Garden had been the far louder representatives. Every time Amanda Serrano appeared on the jumbotron from her locker room, the flags would wave and people would dance. But halfway through the Baumgardner fight, the Irish began to arrive in number. Flooding in from nearby pubs and taverns in their groups of jolly many, to see their own defiant underdog, Katie Taylor. Advertisement Now the thing was really coming together. The Irish and the Puerto Ricans in a single room, an arena hallowed by the boxing gentry for hosting so many of history's greatest fights, arriving from all ports of New York and from thousands of miles beyond — from the homelands themselves. Dueling hysterias that weren't there to be outdone. If the Puerto Ricans had an early advantage with the decibels, the Irish took the job seriously to drown them out. Baumgardner's fight became a marker that merely suggested the nearness of the hour. A last ritual before the ceremony. And by the time they were singing the anthems, first the Amhrán na bhFiann, the Irish national anthem, then Puerto Rico's, the passion had reached a pitch. If you Google-Earthed it to the head of a pin, all that passion zeroed down on the two women who busted the door down in women's boxing. Taylor and Serrano. Rivals by circumstance. Pillars of uninhibited, hot-blooded vicarism. Advertisement What a night it was in the Big Apple. The pervading feeling in the air was that we were here to see Serrano get some justice. We'd lived in the notion that if she weren't robbed in the first fight — which was held at MSG a little over three years ago — she was in the rematch this past November. Whoever governs the laws of percentages would surely favor Serrano. If the judges at ringside found themselves in a 50/50 fight, there would be a natural pull to Serrano, the MVP fighter who sprung into national acclaim through Taylor and — by so doing — had become a professional at heartbreak. Through her walkout, you got the sense that tonight the record would be set straight. This was Serrano's homecoming, her moment. Serrano has the deepest ties to New York. If nothing else, the Taylor rivalry has brought out a showman. Natti Natasha sang her out, while the New York Knicks cheerleaders lined the runway for her hero's welcome. Advertisement Serrano gave the fans everything they wanted, too, dancing her way to the ring. If there was a party going on in the hearts of all the Puerto Ricans in New York, she was the fearless emcee. No nerves. No overwhelming sense of gratitude, as she displayed at the first fight. This was a thing of belonging. She was there to do work, and nothing sets a table quite like comeuppance. Then came Taylor, alone. She didn't arrive with singers or cheerleaders. She stood in the entryway like a lone wolf in silhouette. There was poetry in it. One line of faith. If the odds were against her, she was here to once again show that odds are fictional things, no different than superstitions, or omens. If Puerto Rico was the party at sundown, she was the church at daybreak. She wasn't there to give anything back. When people look back on this trilogy, they will find it all in a single hour. That's how long Serrano and Taylor needed to create history in the moment and the longing for more. Thirty total rounds, in two-minute installments, in which all of the drama unfolded. The first fight was the coronation, as women's boxing headlined MSG. The aura of Taylor versus the heart of Serrano. They went to war, standing in the pocket at times and hacking away at each other. Serrano had Taylor hurt in the fifth round, which was the first plot twist of many. In the second fight, it was the head-butt, and the cut over Serrano's eye. It was the threat that the fight would be stopped, and then the reality that Serrano kept coming. The notion that she, in fact, won. If not on the official scorecards, then in eyes of the public at large. Some 50 million people who tuned in on Netflix contributed to the emotional pool. Advertisement The trilogy wasn't a brawl. There were no moments when caution went to the wind, and each bit down on the mouthpieces. At no point was anybody rocked or wobbled or was anyone in trouble. There were those in-stereo moments during exchanges, in which both fan bases came out of their seats, yet what took place was a boxing match. Action, reaction. Strike and counter. Footwork and head movement. In the first round, nothing happened. In the second and third, rhythms. The left of Taylor was on the frontlines to clear a way for the right. The jab of Serrano was to crank up the volume, to create some inroads. When it looked as though Taylor was getting ahead, Serrano pushed the action. If things were going to slip away, she would at least have her say. In the sixth, as if to bring one of the subplots full circle, it was Serrano who clashed her head into Taylor's. It was no-sold. Taylor, ever defiant to the narratives, didn't lead with her head at all. She was happy to fight at range, to cut angles, to fire rapid sallies when stuck on the ropes, to make sure the right counted when there — vintage Taylor with hand speed and a plan. Serrano came over top and marked Taylor's face, but it's hard to land flush on a target that knows better. Both fighters were in private wars with familiarity, and they wanted to show there was still more to them. Advertisement The tension held for the third straight time all the way to the scorecards, but there was a dawning sense this time that Taylor had gradually outclassed Serrano. A subtle masterclass that was coming into view as the cards were gathered. Hers was a simple passage with profound meaning. And when the ring announcer "Big Mo," Kody Mommaerts, read those cards back to the room, the hearts of Puerto Rico already knew the party was over. At least for them. For the Irish it raged on, through the brilliance of Katie Taylor. As Madison Square Garden emptied, so did the joy. Not because of who won or lost, but because it was over.