Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022 (OFF)

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 10 Dec 2022, 14:36

Lopez - Decision
5
56%
Lopez - T/KO
4
44%
DRAW
0
No votes
Pedraza - T/KO
0
No votes
Pedraza - Decision
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 9

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Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022 (OFF)

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Press Release

Four of boxing’s most electrifying young talents hope to strike the Heisman pose Saturday, Dec. 10, at Madison Square Garden.

Former lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez makes his second appearance at junior welterweight in the 10-round main event against former two-weight world champion Jose “Sniper” Pedraza.

In the 10-round heavyweight co-feature, Jared “The Real Big Baby” Anderson aims for his 13th straight knockout against the battle-tested Jerry “Slugger” Forrest.

Puerto Rican junior middleweight star Xander Zayas steps up in class against 28-fight veteran Alexis Salazar in a scheduled eight-rounder special feature. And, in the televised opener, Tokyo 2020 Olympic silver medalist Keyshawn Davis looks to jumpstart his world title ambitions in an eight-round lightweight duel versus Juan Carlos Burgos.

Lopez-Pedraza, Anderson-Forrest, Zayas-Salazar, and Davis-Burgos will be broadcast LIVE on ESPN, ESPN Deportes and ESPN+ at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT immediately following the Heisman Trophy Ceremony.

Promoted by Top Rank, tickets starting at $51 go on sale Tuesday, Nov. 1 at 12 p.m. ET.

“Four of boxing's mega talents, headlined by the great Teofimo Lopez, will be in action December 10 at the iconic Madison Square Garden. This will be a special evening,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “Lopez is targeting a junior welterweight title shot in 2023, and Jose Pedraza is a Puerto Rican warrior hungry for another world title opportunity. With Jared Anderson, Xander Zayas, and Keyshawn Davis, this card features three additional fighters who will one day be headlining superstars.”

Lopez (17-1, 13 KOs) toppled pound-for-pound king Vasiliy Lomachenko in October 2020 to become the lightweight champion. Thirteen months later, he lost his titles via split decision to George Kambosos Jr. He returned August 13 as a junior welterweight and stopped Pedro Campa in the seventh round. Lopez is no stranger to “Heisman Night,” as he’s authored two of the most indelible Top Rank on ESPN moments on that platform. In 2018, he knocked out Mason Menard in 44 seconds, donned the jersey of Heisman winner Kyler Murray, and topped things off with the Heisman pose and a backflip. One year later, he stopped Richard Commey in the second round to win the IBF lightweight world title and immediately put on the jersey of that year’s victor, LSU’s Joe Burrow. He didn’t forget the pose or the signature backflip that time, either.

Lopez said, “It’s Heisman Night at Madison Square Garden. I’m born for this stage. Once I beat Jose Pedraza in front of my hometown fans, I am coming for all the junior welterweight belts in 2023. The Takeback is in full effect, and I am on a mission to become a champion again.”

Pedraza (29-4-1, 14 KOs), from Cidra, Puerto Rico, won world titles at junior lightweight and lightweight before moving up to the 140-pound ranks in 2019. Despite a competitive decision loss to Jose Ramirez and a draw against Commey in his last two fights, Pedraza still ranks among the most accomplished junior welterweight contenders. Ranked No. 10 by the WBO and WBC, Pedraza can earn another title opportunity with a win over Lopez and move closer to his goal of becoming the first male Puerto Rican boxer since Miguel Cotto to capture world titles in three weight divisions.

"I am here to face the elite fighters of the division, and to me, that is what Teofimo represents,” Pedraza said. “I have come to show that I am still one of the best fighters at 140 pounds. I'm still a threat to everyone in the division, and on December 10, I'm going to prove it. For me, the goal doesn't change. I want to be crowned world champion in a third division, and I know I'm going to achieve it."

Anderson (12-0, 12 KOs), the fighting pride of Toledo, Ohio, has seen his stock skyrocket since turning pro in October 2019 following a decorated U.S. amateur career. He has prototypical heavyweight size at 6-foot-4 and 240 pounds, and he’s stopped nine of his 12 foes in two rounds or less, including four straight second-round stoppages. In August, he returned from an eight-plus month layoff to knock out Serbian veteran Miljan Rovcanin.

“I’m happy to finally be getting a step-up fight,” Anderson said. “Hopefully, this solidifies my place as a contender and confirms that I’m not a prospect anymore."

Forrest (26-5-2, 20 KOs) is the ultimate heavyweight litmus test, a 6’1, 230-pound southpaw who has mixed it up with some of the division’s most notable names, including Carlos Takam, Michael Hunter, and Zhang Zhilei. His only stoppage loss came nearly 10 years ago, and he held Hunter and Zhilei to 10-round draws in 2021. Forrest returned in May and dropped a 10-round decision to two-time world title challenge Kubrat Pulev.

“I’m in camp now. I’m excited and motivated to make a big statement. Jared is the up-and-coming fighter, and all the pressure is on him,” Forrest said. "After my last performance, I feel everyone has forgotten how good I am. I’ve been in the ring against top fighters, and I know that I can compete at the top level. The question is, what can he do against an experienced veteran like me? I am coming to send the ‘Big Baby’ home crying after his first loss. This will be a great fight for the fans in attendance at Madison Square Garden and those watching nationally on ESPN.”

Zayas (14-0, 10 KOs), the youngest signee in Top Rank history, turned pro as a 17-year-old in October 2019 on the same card as Anderson. Since that debut, he’s developed into Puerto Rico’s newest sensation and has knocked out three of his past four foes. He received the co-feature spotlight on the Lopez-Campa card, knocking out Elias Espadas in five riveting rounds. In March, Zayas shined at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden with an eight-round drubbing over Louisiana-born spoiler Quincy LaVallais. Salazar (24-4, 9 KOs), from Guadalajara, Mexico, has won 16 of his last 17 bouts, the only defeat coming via third-round knockout to rising middleweight contender Carlos Adames. He has not fought since January 28, an eight-round decision over Valentin Martinez Guzman in Tijuana, Mexico.

Zayas said, “I am very happy to be part of another amazing card at the legendary Madison Square Garden, and as always, I'm grateful to Top Rank for giving me these opportunities to showcase my skills on such a big stage. Salazar is a strong Mexican veteran, and with this performance, I'm looking to close the year strong and set the tone for a big 2023.

Davis (6-0, 5 KOs) hopes to open the ESPN telecast with his blend of in-fighting and precision that has already made him a lightweight contender to watch. The 23-year-old phenom from Norfolk, Virginia, fought three fought pro fights in 2021 before becoming one of the standouts of Team USA’s boxing team at the Tokyo Olympics. He stopped 2016 Olympic silver medalist Sofiane Oumiha before dropping a tight decision to Cuban sensation Andy Cruz in the gold medal match. Since signing with Top Rank last November, he’s scored a pair of knockouts, most recently a fifth-round drubbing of Omar Tienda on the Shakur Stevenson-Robson Conceição bill in Newark, New Jersey. Burgos (35-6-3, 21 KOs), from Tijuana, is a three-time world title challenger who has fought the likes of retired four-weight world champion Mikey Garcia and undisputed lightweight champion Devin Haney. He has never been knocked out and has experienced a career renaissance of late. In March, he held highly regarded prospect Angel Fierro to a draw.

Davis said, “I will send another message to the lightweight division to end the year. Burgos is a veteran who demands respect, and I can’t overlook the man in front of me on December 10. It’s an honor to fight on ESPN after the Heisman Trophy Ceremony, and I plan on representing Norfolk while putting on a show for all the fans tuning in.”

Undercard action — streaming live and exclusively on ESPN+ — is highlighted by featherweight prospect Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington and welterweight standout Jahi Tucker. Carrington (5-0, 3 KOs), the latest prodigy from the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, steps up in his first scheduled eight-rounder against Texas native Juan Tapia (12-4, 4 KOs). Carrington, a 2020 Olympic Trials gold medalist, shut out Jose Argel on the Stevenson-Conceição undercard. Tapia, who has battled the likes of Stevenson and Olympic bronze medalist Vladimir Nikitin, has never been knocked out.

Tucker (9-0, 5 KOs) looks go 10-0 in an eight-rounder against Ivan Pandzic (14-2-1, 8 KOs). Tucker, from Deer Park, New York, is 4-0 in 2022, including a near-shutout decision over Jose Luis Sanchez in his last outing.

Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 17 Nov 2022, 18:08, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

It was between Sandor Martin or Jose Pedraza.
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Jared Anderson To Face Jerry Forrest On Lopez-Pedraza Undercard 12/10 At MSG

Jerry Forrest will fight a “Big Baby” on a Top Rank show ESPN will air after all.

The “Real Big Baby,” if you ask hard-hitting heavyweight prospect Jared Anderson.

Boxing Scene has learned that the undefeated Anderson (12-0, 12 KOs) and Forrest (26-5-2, 20 KOs) have agreed to square off on the Teofimo Lopez-Jose Pedraza undercard December 10 at Madison Square Garden in New York. Forrest is 0-2-2 in his past four fights, but his two draws during that stretch came against American Michael Hunter and then-unbeaten Chinese southpaw Zhang Zhieli, heavyweights who were on the cusp of moving into position for title shots.

After back-to-back draws with Zhilei (majority) and Hunter (split) in 2021, Forrest lost a unanimous decision to Bulgaria’s Kubrat Pulev in his last fight. Forrest tore a muscle in his chest during the early rounds against Pulev, who won their 10-round match May 14 at The Forum in Inglewood, California by scores of 98-92, 99-91 and 99-91.

Though he hasn’t won a fight since September 2019, Forrest should test Anderson’s impressive power. The southpaw from Newport News, Virginia has been knocked out only once in 33 professional fights, and not since Gerald Washington stopped him in the second round of an August 2013 bout at Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio, California.

Forrest, 34, was supposed to fight Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller in an ESPN main event in July 2020. The besmirched Miller failed yet another test for performance-enhancing drugs, however, and was removed from that fight.

Cameroon’s Carlos Takam replaced Miller on short notice and defeated Forrest by unanimous decision in their 10-rounder at MGM Grand Conference Center in Las Vegas.

The 22-year-old Anderson has been touted by former sparring partner Tyson Fury and legendary promoter Bob Arum as a future heavyweight champion. The Toledo, Ohio native helped prepare the undefeated Fury for his back-to-back stoppages of former WBC champ Deontay Wilder in February 2020 and October 2021.

The 6-foot-4, 240-pound Anderson most recently knocked out Serbia’s Miljan Rovcanin (24-3, 16 KOs) in the second round of a scheduled eight-rounder August 27 at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His fight with Forrest will be the first 10-rounder of Anderson’s three-year pro career.

In addition to the 12-round junior welterweight bout between Brooklyn’s Lopez (17-1, 13 KOs) and Puerto Rico’s Pedraza (29-4-1, 14 KOs) and the Anderson-Forrest fight, ESPN’s three-bout broadcast December 10 also will feature highly touted lightweight prospect Keyshawn Davis (6-0, 5 KOs). An opponent for Davis, of Norfolk, Virginia, hadn’t been secured as of Wednesday.
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by KiwiRider »

Pretty happy with Forest for Anderson at this stage in his development.
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by margaret thatcher »

top rank have been good to pedraza, get him fight after fight
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Press Release

Four of boxing’s most electrifying young talents hope to strike the Heisman pose Saturday, Dec. 10, at Madison Square Garden.

Former lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez makes his second appearance at junior welterweight in the 10-round main event against former two-weight world champion Jose “Sniper” Pedraza.

In the 10-round heavyweight co-feature, Jared “The Real Big Baby” Anderson aims for his 13th straight knockout against the battle-tested Jerry “Slugger” Forrest.

Puerto Rican junior middleweight star Xander Zayas steps up in class against 28-fight veteran Alexis Salazar in a scheduled eight-rounder special feature. And, in the televised opener, Tokyo 2020 Olympic silver medalist Keyshawn Davis looks to jumpstart his world title ambitions in an eight-round lightweight duel versus Juan Carlos Burgos.

Lopez-Pedraza, Anderson-Forrest, Zayas-Salazar, and Davis-Burgos will be broadcast LIVE on ESPN, ESPN Deportes and ESPN+ at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT immediately following the Heisman Trophy Ceremony.

Promoted by Top Rank, tickets starting at $51 go on sale Tuesday, Nov. 1 at 12 p.m. ET.

“Four of boxing's mega talents, headlined by the great Teofimo Lopez, will be in action December 10 at the iconic Madison Square Garden. This will be a special evening,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “Lopez is targeting a junior welterweight title shot in 2023, and Jose Pedraza is a Puerto Rican warrior hungry for another world title opportunity. With Jared Anderson, Xander Zayas, and Keyshawn Davis, this card features three additional fighters who will one day be headlining superstars.”

Lopez (17-1, 13 KOs) toppled pound-for-pound king Vasiliy Lomachenko in October 2020 to become the lightweight champion. Thirteen months later, he lost his titles via split decision to George Kambosos Jr. He returned August 13 as a junior welterweight and stopped Pedro Campa in the seventh round. Lopez is no stranger to “Heisman Night,” as he’s authored two of the most indelible Top Rank on ESPN moments on that platform. In 2018, he knocked out Mason Menard in 44 seconds, donned the jersey of Heisman winner Kyler Murray, and topped things off with the Heisman pose and a backflip. One year later, he stopped Richard Commey in the second round to win the IBF lightweight world title and immediately put on the jersey of that year’s victor, LSU’s Joe Burrow. He didn’t forget the pose or the signature backflip that time, either.

Lopez said, “It’s Heisman Night at Madison Square Garden. I’m born for this stage. Once I beat Jose Pedraza in front of my hometown fans, I am coming for all the junior welterweight belts in 2023. The Takeback is in full effect, and I am on a mission to become a champion again.”

Pedraza (29-4-1, 14 KOs), from Cidra, Puerto Rico, won world titles at junior lightweight and lightweight before moving up to the 140-pound ranks in 2019. Despite a competitive decision loss to Jose Ramirez and a draw against Commey in his last two fights, Pedraza still ranks among the most accomplished junior welterweight contenders. Ranked No. 10 by the WBO and WBC, Pedraza can earn another title opportunity with a win over Lopez and move closer to his goal of becoming the first male Puerto Rican boxer since Miguel Cotto to capture world titles in three weight divisions.

"I am here to face the elite fighters of the division, and to me, that is what Teofimo represents,” Pedraza said. “I have come to show that I am still one of the best fighters at 140 pounds. I'm still a threat to everyone in the division, and on December 10, I'm going to prove it. For me, the goal doesn't change. I want to be crowned world champion in a third division, and I know I'm going to achieve it."

Anderson (12-0, 12 KOs), the fighting pride of Toledo, Ohio, has seen his stock skyrocket since turning pro in October 2019 following a decorated U.S. amateur career. He has prototypical heavyweight size at 6-foot-4 and 240 pounds, and he’s stopped nine of his 12 foes in two rounds or less, including four straight second-round stoppages. In August, he returned from an eight-plus month layoff to knock out Serbian veteran Miljan Rovcanin.

“I’m happy to finally be getting a step-up fight,” Anderson said. “Hopefully, this solidifies my place as a contender and confirms that I’m not a prospect anymore."

Forrest (26-5-2, 20 KOs) is the ultimate heavyweight litmus test, a 6’1, 230-pound southpaw who has mixed it up with some of the division’s most notable names, including Carlos Takam, Michael Hunter, and Zhang Zhilei. His only stoppage loss came nearly 10 years ago, and he held Hunter and Zhilei to 10-round draws in 2021. Forrest returned in May and dropped a 10-round decision to two-time world title challenge Kubrat Pulev.

“I’m in camp now. I’m excited and motivated to make a big statement. Jared is the up-and-coming fighter, and all the pressure is on him,” Forrest said. "After my last performance, I feel everyone has forgotten how good I am. I’ve been in the ring against top fighters, and I know that I can compete at the top level. The question is, what can he do against an experienced veteran like me? I am coming to send the ‘Big Baby’ home crying after his first loss. This will be a great fight for the fans in attendance at Madison Square Garden and those watching nationally on ESPN.”

Zayas (14-0, 10 KOs), the youngest signee in Top Rank history, turned pro as a 17-year-old in October 2019 on the same card as Anderson. Since that debut, he’s developed into Puerto Rico’s newest sensation and has knocked out three of his past four foes. He received the co-feature spotlight on the Lopez-Campa card, knocking out Elias Espadas in five riveting rounds. In March, Zayas shined at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden with an eight-round drubbing over Louisiana-born spoiler Quincy LaVallais. Salazar (24-4, 9 KOs), from Guadalajara, Mexico, has won 16 of his last 17 bouts, the only defeat coming via third-round knockout to rising middleweight contender Carlos Adames. He has not fought since January 28, an eight-round decision over Valentin Martinez Guzman in Tijuana, Mexico.

Zayas said, “I am very happy to be part of another amazing card at the legendary Madison Square Garden, and as always, I'm grateful to Top Rank for giving me these opportunities to showcase my skills on such a big stage. Salazar is a strong Mexican veteran, and with this performance, I'm looking to close the year strong and set the tone for a big 2023.

Davis (6-0, 5 KOs) hopes to open the ESPN telecast with his blend of in-fighting and precision that has already made him a lightweight contender to watch. The 23-year-old phenom from Norfolk, Virginia, fought three fought pro fights in 2021 before becoming one of the standouts of Team USA’s boxing team at the Tokyo Olympics. He stopped 2016 Olympic silver medalist Sofiane Oumiha before dropping a tight decision to Cuban sensation Andy Cruz in the gold medal match. Since signing with Top Rank last November, he’s scored a pair of knockouts, most recently a fifth-round drubbing of Omar Tienda on the Shakur Stevenson-Robson Conceição bill in Newark, New Jersey. Burgos (35-6-3, 21 KOs), from Tijuana, is a three-time world title challenger who has fought the likes of retired four-weight world champion Mikey Garcia and undisputed lightweight champion Devin Haney. He has never been knocked out and has experienced a career renaissance of late. In March, he held highly regarded prospect Angel Fierro to a draw.

Davis said, “I will send another message to the lightweight division to end the year. Burgos is a veteran who demands respect, and I can’t overlook the man in front of me on December 10. It’s an honor to fight on ESPN after the Heisman Trophy Ceremony, and I plan on representing Norfolk while putting on a show for all the fans tuning in.”

Undercard action — streaming live and exclusively on ESPN+ — is highlighted by featherweight prospect Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington and welterweight standout Jahi Tucker. Carrington (5-0, 3 KOs), the latest prodigy from the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, steps up in his first scheduled eight-rounder against Texas native Juan Tapia (12-4, 4 KOs). Carrington, a 2020 Olympic Trials gold medalist, shut out Jose Argel on the Stevenson-Conceição undercard. Tapia, who has battled the likes of Stevenson and Olympic bronze medalist Vladimir Nikitin, has never been knocked out.

Tucker (9-0, 5 KOs) looks go 10-0 in an eight-rounder against Ivan Pandzic (14-2-1, 8 KOs). Tucker, from Deer Park, New York, is 4-0 in 2022, including a near-shutout decision over Jose Luis Sanchez in his last outing.
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Teofimo Lopez on Pedraza: It’s Not Someone That I Would Have Liked To Face

“It’s not someone that I would have liked to face,” said Lopez during an interview with Mark Kriegel. “However, with everything that’s going on, so many other fights are being matched right now. This was the best opportunity right now.”

“Everything happens for a reason. I’m just looking forward to making it a phenomenal end of the year to go into 2023 for a championship.”
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Counter-puncher »

margaret thatcher wrote: 26 Oct 2022, 15:53 top rank have been good to pedraza, get him fight after fight
true, but for me he tends to deliver

Ramirez, Commey, Zepeda were all good fights, going back a bit Beltran was a decent one too?

I like Pedraza :TU:
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

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Press Release | Undercard Information

Rising junior welterweight Tiger Johnson, who starred for Team USA at the Tokyo Olympics, intends on capping his 2022 campaign with a standout performance at The World’s Most Famous Arena.

Johnson steps up in his first scheduled eight-rounder against Mike O’Han Jr. on Saturday, Dec. 10, at Madison Square Garden. Johnson-O’Han joins a loaded fight card headlined by the junior welterweight main event between former lightweight king Teofimo Lopez and former two-weight world champion Jose “Sniper” Pedraza.

Johnson (6-0, 4 KOs), from Cleveland, Ohio, has established himself as one of the sport's top prospects since turning pro last November. A quarterfinalist in Tokyo, Johnson is 5-0 in 2022, a year that began with a four-round decision over Xavier Madrid in January. In August, he became the first fighter to stop Massachusetts native Harry Gigliotti. Johnson returned on the Vasiliy Lomachenko-Jamaine Ortiz card last month and shut out Esteban Garcia over six rounds. He moves up to the eight-round plateau against O’Han (16-1, 9 KOs), a native of Holbrook, Massachusetts, who has won seven straight bouts.

Johnson said, “Madison Square Garden is the biggest stage in boxing, and I plan on making a huge statement against a tough opponent in Mike O’Han. I am ready to put the 140-pound weight class on notice. I’m going to close out 2022 strong and start climbing the rankings in 2023."

Lopez-Pedraza tops a televised quadruple-header airing immediately after the Heisman Trophy Ceremony at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT on ESPN, ESPN Deportes and ESPN+. Heavyweight sensation Jared “The Real Big Baby” Anderson aims for his 13th straight knockout against the battle-tested Jerry “Slugger” Forrest, Puerto Rican junior middleweight star Xander Zayas steps up in class against 28-fight veteran Alexis Salazar, and 2020 Olympic silver medalist Keyshawn Davis looks to jumpstart his world title ambitions in a lightweight duel versus Juan Carlos Burgos.

Johnson-O’Han and additional undercard bouts will stream live and exclusively on ESPN+ at 6 p.m. ET/3 p.m. PT. In other undercard action, “Irish” Joe Ward (7-1, 4 KOs) will battle Frederic Julan (12-1, 10 KOs) in a six-round light heavyweight tilt, undefeated Polish heavyweight Damian Knyba (8-0, 5 KOs) steps up against Emilio Salas (7-3-1, 3 KOs) in a six-rounder, Brooklyn-born featherweight sensation Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington (5-0, 3 KOs) takes on Juan Tapia (12-4, 4 KOs) in an eight-rounder, and Long Island-born welterweight Jahi Tucker (9-0, 5 KOs) aims for win number 10 against Ivan Pandzic (14-2-1, 8 KOs) in an eight-rounder.
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Junior Welterweight: A title eliminator will be ordered between former lineal/unified lightweight champ Teofimo Lopez (17-1, 13 KOs) and Spain's Sandor Martin (40-2, 13 KOs).

The winner will have a long wait to challenge for the full title, not to mention the order is on hold pending the outcome of Lopez’s December 10 meeting with former two-division titlist Jose Pedraza (29-4-1, 14 KOs).

Jose Zepeda (35-2, 27 KOs; 2 ND) and Regis Prograis (27-1, 23 KOs) will meet on November 26 for the vacant title, with the winner already required to next defend against former WBC/WBO titlist Jose Ramirez
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Re: Teofimo Lopez vs. Jose Pedraza | ESPN - December 10, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Teofimo Lopez Predicting Knockout Of Jose Pedraza On December 10th On ESPN+

Former unified lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez believes he will knock out Jose ‘Sniper’ Pedraza on December 10th on ESPN+ at Madison Square Garden in New York.

Teofimo (17-1, 13 KOs) wants to show the fan that he’s improved in his see the second fight since moving up to 140 earlier this year. He wants to show against the 33-year-old former two-division world champion Pedraza (29-4-1, 14 KOs) that he’s improved since his upset loss to George Kambosos Jr in 2020.

If Teofimo is not improved, he might struggle and possibly lose to Pedraza because he’s every bit as good as Kambosos, if not better.

Teofimo must impress in this fight because there are a lot better fighters in the division than Pedraza. As long as Teofimo looks good against Pedraza, his promoters at Top Rank will move him against a quality fighter next year, preferably one of the champions.

“Just learning, elevating, getting better, it’s been great,” said Teofimo Lopez to spam when asked how things have been in the last three months as he prepared for his December 10th fight against Jose Pedraza on ESPN+ at MSG in New York.

“The knockout is going to come. You don’t even have to look for the knockout. It’ll eventually come. Whether it takes a little bit more time, it’ll come. I feel like that’s what’s going to happen between myself and Pedraza.

“I’m not counting Pedraza out. He’s a guy that comes at you, and he boxes. At the same time, he switches, he dances and knows how to fight orthodox, and he can also fight southpaw very well.

“I don’t think I’ve ever faced anyone that can do both. So, I’m really looking forward to that type of match-up as well. It’s a bit of a challenge. Not the biggest challenge I’ve taken since Lomachenko. However, it’s a stepping stone for what’s next for the following year.

“That’s the thing about me, the beauty about myself. I think God that I have this gift and this talent. I can fight many of these fighters in different ways. I can use what they’re really good at to my advantage.

“That’s the type of calibrated fighter I am. I’m able to take your most dominant, which I like to do most of the time. However, we like to switch it up; my whole thing is just focusing on

“Honestly, it’s been great. I love the journey that I’m on. I love the fact that I’m enjoying this journey rather than just a destination. Just focusing on that. I just know that Pedraza is going to bring out a better version of that I didn’t even know I had in me.

“That’s why we’re pushing ourselves to greater heights, greater limits. Even in sparking. Throwing more combinations, getting myself even more fatigued, more tired. So that way, when fight night comes, I don’t have any of that in any of the rounds.

“I don’t know,” said Teofimo when asked if Pedraza is better now or when he fought Gervonta ‘Tank’ Davis when he was undefeated at 130 in 2017 and was knocked out in seven rounds.

“I honestly believe that after fighting Lomachenko and stuff. You guys got to realize that fighting a calibrated fighter like Lomachenko, someone that was such a technician in there. You got to learn something from them.

“I believe he learned a lot from the Lomachenkof fight, the Commey fight. He’s only getting better. Even though he’s still able to give you good quality fights that people want to see.

“What I would like to say to a lot of people. I can go anywhere I like. I don’t need to go specifically to the WBC. With all due respect to Mauricio Sulaiman and to the WBC sanctioning. Why do we have three other sanctioning [bodies] there? For a reason.

“We’re able to navigate and figure it out. I’m going to listen to Top Rank, ESPN, and my manager and keeping it moving, pushing that thread, pushing that needle, and giving the people a show. That’s really my main objective here.

“It’s to give them the type of fights that they’ve been looking for. We’ve been talking about how long for the Spence and Crawford and how long for the Garcia and Tank. Do you know what I mean? There has been so many fights going and going, and no one is fighting.

“So, I just want to be the first guy that breaks that ice. I thought by facing Lomachenko; I would. Obviously, these guys are still trying to protect their O.

“So, I think we just got to keep going, building these fights and giving the fans what they really want to see, and that’s knockouts.

“My last fight against [Pedro] Campa, and now I feel much better. My camp has been much, much more vigilant and more observant of me, trying to maintain and trying to keep me on a good steady course.

“Now that we’re fighting twice just this year alone, obviously, we’re starting to get some momentum and starting to build that. The whole thing now is next year, the whole goal is to fight three times next year.

“That’s exactly what’s happening; that’s what we’re trying to do,” said Teofimo about him pulling the trigger more on his punches. “It’s not even ‘a try’ at this point. It’s something we’re naturally doing at this point.

“I believe I’m getting more comfortable in there, even in sparring. I hate sparring, I really do, because I never take it that serious not like many others do. I just try to practice on my techniques and things.

“Now I’m even doing that. I’m pushing it. If I hurt my sparring partners, it’s move on to the next guy. That’s really where we’re at mentally-wise, focusing on how do we build up more of that dog in me. How do we do it? Keep pushing.

“We’re closing it out on Heisman night. It’s going to be the best show on ESPN that night.

Ruthless-RKO
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