Jarrett Hurd on his career ending: ‘I’m happy it’s over’
Jarrett Hurd said he would retire if he didn’t win this past Saturday, and he’s remained true to his word after dropping a split decision to the 35-4 Johan Gonzalez on the preliminary undercard of Gervonta Roach’s draw with Lamont Roach Jnr.
“Thank you for all of the love and support over the years!” Hurd, a 34-year-old from Accokeek, Maryland, posted on social media. “Man… helluva career. [...] I’m happy it’s over with, though. Brutal sport, and I’ve been through some wars! I chased my dreams, accomplished what most people dreamed of and ended things on my terms. Without you guys, and most importantly God on my side, no way this would’ve been possible. Time for the next chapter of life.”
Hurd won the vacant IBF junior middleweight title in 2017, stopping Tony Harrison in nine rounds. He defended later that year with a 10-round technical knockout of Austin Trout and then met Erislandy Lara in a unification bout in April 2018.
The fight with Lara was one of those wars Hurd referenced, garnering Fight of the Year honors from the Boxing Writers Association of America (The Ring magazine selected the second fight between Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and Gennadiy Golovkin for its 2018 awards.)
Hurd edged Lara by the narrowest of split decisions to add the WBA belt. After a stay-busy win over Jason Welborn (TKO4) in December 2018, Hurd met Julian Williams in May 2019. It was another tough battle for Hurd, and this time it was Williams who triumphed via unanimous decision to gain both titles.
By 2021, Hurd had moved up to middleweight. And the boxer who had somehow boiled down to 154lbs and then significantly rehydrated by fight night no longer had a size advantage at 160lbs.
Hurd was also now fighting without the presence of his father, Fred Hurd, who died in March 2021.
Jarrett Hurd lost a split decision to Luis Arias in June 2021, then returned 21 months later and lost against Jose Armando Resendiz in March 2023. Hurd was behind on the scorecards after nine rounds when a bad cut on his lip led the ringside physician to stop the Resendiz bout in the 10th.
Hurd only scored one more victory. He stopped the 14-5 Tyi Edmonds in December 2023 and fought to a draw with Jeison Rosario last August. The loss to Gonzalez leaves Hurd with a record of 25-4-1(17 KOs).
Jarrett Hurd Retires
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
Best of luck to him. I hope he was clever with his money.
I remember when he became champ he was also a fireman. I wonder if he's going to stick with that.
I remember when he became champ he was also a fireman. I wonder if he's going to stick with that.
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margaret thatcher
- Featherweight
- Posts: 39211
- Joined: 22 Jul 2019, 15:43
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
he had a good run at his peak, but man did he fall off hard
him-jrock-banana was like a circle jerk for the worst ever unified champ
him-jrock-banana was like a circle jerk for the worst ever unified champ
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 100864
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
Short lived prime, but he made it to the top of the big cards on at least a few occasions. He had a career to be proud of. Hope he enjoys the rest of his life.
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EdwardRevolver1993
- Welterweight
- Posts: 782
- Joined: 11 Apr 2016, 08:09
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
Comes across as a genuinely good dude. I was a fan and remember picking him to beat Lara, when most thought he'd lose to a Cuban.
But man, he fell off that cliff pretty quickly. I always wondered what was the reason? Was it because of his fast-burning style mixed with a weight cut (he was a big dude for a 154lber)?
Could it be that he felt he overachieved (accomplished more than he was told he would), so his heart wasn't fully into it anymore after a 1st loss?
Gotta say, he had a decent run in 2016-2018. Molina, Harrison, Trout, Lara... He was the first and only to stop Trout and unified with Lara while being considered an underdog.
That WBC/WBA/IBF unification against Jermell definitely should've happened in late 2018.
Wishing him nothing but the best in his life outside of boxing.
But man, he fell off that cliff pretty quickly. I always wondered what was the reason? Was it because of his fast-burning style mixed with a weight cut (he was a big dude for a 154lber)?
Could it be that he felt he overachieved (accomplished more than he was told he would), so his heart wasn't fully into it anymore after a 1st loss?
Gotta say, he had a decent run in 2016-2018. Molina, Harrison, Trout, Lara... He was the first and only to stop Trout and unified with Lara while being considered an underdog.
That WBC/WBA/IBF unification against Jermell definitely should've happened in late 2018.
Wishing him nothing but the best in his life outside of boxing.
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
When he managed to cut and have a clear size advantage, he made the best out of it, but then pains started after J-Rock.
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apollo creed
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 7254
- Joined: 18 Aug 2014, 12:28
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
this dude should've fought at 168, hard to think how he made the weight limit at jr mw
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Jeff_lacy_ko
- Super Featherweight
- Posts: 5710
- Joined: 06 Sep 2018, 14:15
Re: Jarrett Hurd Retires
His major advantage was size and got him a lineal title. At 168 hes a punching bag and you would have never heard of himapollo creed wrote: ↑15 Mar 2025, 12:44 this dude should've fought at 168, hard to think how he made the weight limit at jr mw