Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 20 Jun 2025, 15:26

Walsh - Decision
0
No votes
Walsh - T/KO
1
100%
DRAW
0
No votes
Espadas - T/KO
0
No votes
Espadas - Decision
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 1

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Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Press Release

Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas on June 21 at Chumash Casino

‘King’ Callum Walsh, (13-0, 11 KOs), of Cork, Ireland makes his return to Southern California on Saturday, June 21 against contender Elias ‘The Latin Kid’ Espadas, (23-6-1, 16 KOs), of Yucatan, Mexico at the Chumash Casino Resort and broadcast live globally on UFC Fight Pass.

The ten-round junior middleweight main event is presented by Tom Loeffler’s 360 Promotions. Walsh will be making the fourth defense of his WBC Continental Americas Title, he is currently ranked #4 by the WBC and #5 by the IBF.

Walsh kicked off his 2025 campaign with a first round knockout of Scotland’s Dean Sutherland (19-1) on St. Patrick’s Day Weekend in The Theater at Madison Square Garden. The Freddie Roach trained southpaw fought in Ireland for the first time as a professional on September 20, 2024, stopping Poland’s Przemyslaw Runowski, (22-2-1), in the second round at the 3Arena in Dublin.

Trained by Manny Robles, Espadas battled over ten rounds against undefeated Kazakh contender Sadriddin Akhmedov on April 19 at the Commerce Casino Events Center. The clash was judged a draw with Espadas. He also battled undefeated young stars, Xander Zayas, Yamaguchi Falcao, D’Mitrius Ballard and Fiodor Czerkaszyn.

Additional fights for this event will be announced shortly.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 16 Jun 2025, 04:43, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Later this Month :box:
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Re: Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

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Fight Week!! :box:
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Re: Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

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Callum Walsh says he is ready to prove he’s one of the best

When Callum Walsh first laced up the gloves and stepped between the ropes, there was no indication of what was to come.

“I actually lost my first amateur fight,” he told BS during a recent conversation at the Wild Card Boxing Club, where he is training for a matchup with Elias Espadas on June 21 at Chumash Casino in Santa Ynez, California. “Eleven years old, lost my first amateur fight.”

But, Walsh points out, he soon got into the swing of things. He thereafter won what he recalls as “a crazy amount in a row,” and at age 15 competed for, and won, his first of what would be six national titles.

Like his banner mate Cain Sandoval – who is also, like Walsh, trained by Freddie Roach and promoted by Tom Loeffler – Walsh first picked up the sport not because he was a miscreant who needed his aggression tamed and focused, but because his father was a former boxer who encouraged his son to follow in his footsteps.

Born in Cobh (pronounced “Cove”), on a small island in Cork Harbour best known as the final port of call for the Titanic, Walsh was, he says, “always around boxing.”

“I never grew up watching boxing,” he said. “That’s not how I got into it. It’s just what I knew. I was always around the boxing gyms. And once I got older, I would just go to the gym, Monday, Wednesday, Friday nights. Go to school and go to the gym. When you grow up doing something, it’s just what you know. I didn’t know any different.”

By the time he won a European gold medal at the age of 16 in 2017, he began to think “I can try and do something with this.”

He contemplated taking aim at the Olympics until the COVID pandemic pushed the Tokyo Games from 2020 to 2021. He decided to try his luck at becoming a disciple of Roach, but getting into the US from Ireland at the height of the pandemic was not an option. So he flew to Tijuana, Mexico, tried twice (and failed) to walk across the border and managed to gain entry on a third attempt when he said he was visiting his father, who by then lived in Long Beach, California.

Walsh made his way to Hollywood and knocked on the door of the Wild Card. Roach looked him up and down, and told him if he wanted to train there he’d have to spar first. So he did, putting in several rounds with Blair Cobbs. Roach told him to come back the next day, which he did. Ultimately, Roach took him on, and Walsh has trained there since, amassing a record of 13-0 (11 KOs).

Partly because of the restrictions imposed by COVID, Walsh trained and sparred at Wild Card every day for a year before making his pro debut, a grounding he thinks gave him a stable base that he might not otherwise have had.

“It’s something that will never get old,” he said of training in one of the sport’s great cathedrals. “You don’t get used to it, especially because you just don’t know who’s going to be here on any given day. It’s constantly changing. There’s constantly stuff going on. Every day is exciting.”

At first, Walsh chose to continue soaking up the excitement when he left the gym, as well, but after two years living in Hollywood, he has moved to the more tranquil surroundings of the Ventura farmlands.

“I had to move back to the quiet, the country,” he said with a smile.

Despite being taken the distance just twice in his young career, Walsh doesn’t feel the need to start banking more rounds in the ring for experience.

“I get enough rounds in the gym, to be honest,” he said. “I get the rounds in sparring. I don’t really need any unnecessary damage. I don’t need to fight 10 rounds; I spar 10 rounds comfortably. I know it’s different to a fight. But still, I know I can do it. I get paid the same whether I knock them out in the first round or it goes 10 rounds, and nobody wants to go in there and fight for 10 rounds and take damage. I’d rather go in there and get the fight done and move on to the next one and be healthy and happy.”

At the time we talk, Walsh hasn’t yet watched tape of Espadas, 23-6-1 (16 KOs), although he says he will do so closer to the fight. He prefers to focus on himself and, at least initially, leave the planning to Roach.

“Obviously, my team has a plan,” he said. “Freddie has a plan. Right now, I’m not too worried. I’m just getting in shape, getting ready, and to be honest, for me, you know, once I’m 100 percent ready, it doesn’t matter who I fight. Doesn’t matter what their style is. I’ll figure them out eventually.”

The fact is, Walsh continued, “I believe when I'm at my best, I can fight anybody and beat anybody on any given night. And I don't like to think too much about my opponents. I don't really like the whole face-off thing. I prefer to just train and be ready and just simply get in there and do my job. I think of this as a job. My job is to fight, and I'll fight anybody.”

Even if he hasn’t yet seen much of Espadas, he knows about him, knows that he is coming off an impressive April outing when he fought to a draw against unbeaten Sadriddin Akhmedov.

“So he’s coming at his best, coming off two full camps,” Walsh said. “So I think if I go in there and make a big statement, it is a good way to measure myself. But I think these are the fights that I need. I believe I’m one of the best fighters in the world, and I just need to prove it.”
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Re: Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

'Big work, big results': Long, perilous days define Callum Walsh

Callum Walsh is assembling an astonishing résumé of performing some of the most dangerous work known to man and devoting the greatest number of hours possible to his perilous occupations.

He’s done it to perfection thus far, boasting a record of 13-0 (11 KOs) and is world ranked at junior middleweight (No. 6 by the WBC and IBF). The 24-year-old Irish southpaw takes the next step in his promising career as he faces Mexico’s Elias Espadas, 23-6-1 (16 KOs), Their scheduled ten-round contest headlines a UFC Fight Pass show this SAturday from Chumash Casino in Santa Ynez, California.

Although Walsh first began to box at age six under his father Ian Buckley’s direction, he sought full-time work from the time he was 16. Walsh worked seven days an Irish ocean fishing boat for two years before moving on to become a cargo ships unloader as heavy steel and logs moved above him.

“Very dangerous,” Walsh recalled to BS after a training session at trainer Freddie Roach’s Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, California. “When they’re unloading these steel sheets, hooking it on, watching it load up and move right over your head … it’s crazy to think about if any of this falls. So big. We had these guys moving timber over us with a crane.”

As a fisherman, Walsh routinely awoke around 4 a.m.. He then reported for work and remained on the clock “until we were done,” in an industry ranked by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as the most dangerous in terms of fatality rate.

In the evening hours, Walsh would hone his boxing skills. That level of commitment led him to amateur tournaments, and eventually to the decision to choose boxing over fishing.

Still, an invaluable lesson was gained from his earlier jobs.

“Working hard helps me fulfill my dreams and get what I want,” Walsh stated. “That’s why I work so hard. That’s why I take on tough challenges. Because the payoff from it is massive. You put in big work, you’re going to get big results. It’s definitely paying off.”

Trained by Roach and promoted by Tom Loeffler - best known for his incredible work with former world champions Gennadiy Golovkin and Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko- Walsh has another key figure in his corner. He was the first boxer to be promoted by UFC CEO Dana White, who is staging his first Zuffa Boxing Promotion on September 13 in Las Vegas with the Canelo-Alvarez-Terence Crawford event.

“I don’t have anything done at the moment, but I’d be very hopeful that I can maybe fight on the Canelo card,” Walsh said. “With Dana involved, I’ll definitely be asking for it depending on how this fight goes.

“I know they have plans for me. I will ask for it. A closed mouth don’t get fed, you know? So we’ll see. If I can get in there, it’d be nice. I’ll fight any quality opponent.”

First, Walsh has to apply the fruits of his work ethic to Espadas on Saturday night.

The 34-year-old Espadas derailed another young fighter’s high hopes in his last outing. It came just two months ago, when Espadas battled Abel Sanchez-trained prospect Sadriddin Akhmedov to a draw on April 19 at Commerce Casino in California.

In 2022, Espadas fought unbeaten Xander Zayas, losing by fifth-round TKO. Zayas is now set for his first major title fight, when he faces Jorge Garcia for the vacant WBO 154lbs belt on July 26 in New York City.

“Yes, I’m looking forward to testing myself against a very tough opponent with a lot of experience who’s coming off back-to-back quality fights,” Walsh said. “By seeing what I can do, I can have even more confidence in my ability after the fight.”

Walsh is most intrigued in matching his will to win versus Espadas’, knowing the veteran is confronting a career clock.

“Especially against these tough Mexican fighters. When you’re exposed to these tough fighters, I know he’ll be there until the very end, trying to win this fight,” Walsh said. “Let’s see. I believe my power will be effective. He’s durable and tough. With my will to win and power, we’ll see what he’s got.”

Loeffler has previously spoken of seeking to stage a Walsh showdown with Puerto Rico’s Zayas. The pairing is a natural for The Theater at Madison Square Garden, since both have sold out the venue on cards commemorating their homeland’s respective holidays.

“I’m here every day, learning, working hard, getting better, stronger, faster,” Walsh said. “I’m feeling in top shape now, getting ready to take on this challenge.”

Walsh hasn’t needed more than two rounds of work in his past three bouts.

He dusted off Carlos Ortiz Cervantes in the second round at Chumash lat June, then tore through Przemyslaw Runowski in the same amount of time in a Dublin homecoming fight in September.

An even quicker night at the office came in his most recent ring appearance. Irish eyes were smiling as Walsh knocked out Dean Sutherland in the first round of a MSG Theater St.Patrick’s Day weekend card on March 16.

“I believe I’m going in the right direction,” Walsh said. “As long as I make the fight easy, that just goes to show you I’m not your average fighter. I’m levels above.”

Feeling that way is rooted in the incessant dedication to work, and out-working the opposition, since his father told him to do so as a child boxer.

“I realized that if I worked hard, I could get all the things that I wanted. If I had one thing, I was willing to put in the work when it gets tough. I was willing to get the job done to get stuff,” Walsh said.

Those attributes have been identified by the Boston men who so strongly support Walsh: Roach and White.

"In my opinion, the special fighters — the really special fighters – are born to compete. And I mean in anything, not just sports,” Roach said. “They have a need to always win. Callum is that way. He has to win. That's what drives him to train so hard.

“I could see that the first day he came to me at Wild Card to train. It was sparring day and I told him, ‘If you want to work out, you'll have to spar.’ He didn't hesitate and he didn't ask about who he would be sparring against. He just dove into the deep end. I love that attitude. After that, he would come back to Wild Card every day and put in a full day's work without a break. That's the only way I can explain it. He wants to be better than anyone else. You can't teach that."

Walsh said there’s a simple reason for that.

“I’ve worked for everything I have,” he pointed out. Maybe some of it is ‘right place, right time,’ but I’ve put myself in those positions to make it happen. I haven’t been gifted any extra position.”

With eight-division champion Manny Pacquiao back training at Wild Card for his July 19 welterweight title fight against Mario Barrios Jnr, Walsh recalled being drawn to first visit the famed gym as a 15-year-old, when he had just started toiling on the Irish fishing boats.

Walsh bought a souvenir Wild Card T-shirt he’s stored safely inside his grandmother’s home, and gained a personal audience with Roach – commemorated by Roach’s May 20 Instagram post proving the visit.

The session left that indelible impression on the Hall of Fame trainer who’s well aware the Irish have an innate fighting spirit.

“I took a chance to go to Freddie’s gym. Nobody told me, ‘Come here, I’ll give you this,’” Walsh said. “I put myself in these positions, and it’s working out. No one can say I was given anything. I took chances to get here. It was, ‘Take the risk or lose the chance.’ I’ve taken the risk, and now I’ve got the chance.”

Roach and White and Loeffler “can tell if somebody really wants it or not – straight just by looking at me. I’m here to test myself. I’m a very loyal person. I know what they’re doing for me. The way I can give it back is to win and be the best in the world.”

When Walsh returns home to Ireland, he sometimes crosses paths with his former boss on the cargo ships, who won the fighter’s loyalty by providing Walsh the freedom to work around his boxing schedule, to avoid the conflicts that would occur on the fishing boat.

The boss fully understands what kind of employee Walsh is, not too long ago expressing it to the rising title contender, who knows, “I still have a job with the ships if I want it.”
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Re: Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

NASTY EYE GASH SEES CALLUM WALSH SCORE FIFTH-ROUND TECHNICAL DECISION WIN AGAINST ELIAS ESPADAS

Callum Walsh's clash against Elias Espadas ended anticlimactically but in victory nonetheless as the Irishman won a fifth-round technical decision win Saturday at the Chumash Casino in Santa Ynez, California.

A clash of heads in the second round between the southpaw Walsh (14-0, 11 KOs) and orthodox Espadas (23-7-1, 16 KOs) split open Walsh's right eye with a nasty gash, but the Irishman realized he had time on his hands to end matters on his own terms, especially as his combinations backed up Espadas.

In the end, however, the fight was called off right as the bell sounded in the fifth, and Walsh ended up being rewarded with scores of 50-46 across the board for the super welterweight fight scheduled for 10 rounds.

"I want to apologize … It’s very disappointing to win a fight like this," Walsh said afterward. "I'll put on a show again for you, definitely. It was growing into a good fight, and both of us were enjoying it. It's not the best way to win … I felt the fight was going one sided and in my way. It was going to continue going my way, it's unfortunate. [The cut] impacted my vision and I couldn't really see. But I feel that I did enough [to win]."

Before the third round got underway, referee Rudy Barragan had the ringside physician Tony Hicks inspect Walsh's eye. The same scenario unfolded before the fourth, and the fight ultimately ended in the fifth before a punch was thrown due to the severity of the cut.

As he looks to carry the flag for Zuffa Boxing, Walsh also used the opportunity to accept Fernando Vargas Jr.’s recent challenge and said he would welcome a fight against him on the Canelo Alvarez-Terence Crawford undercard Sept. 13 in Las Vegas.

Walsh-Espadas headlined a 360 Promotions "Hollywood Fight Nights" show on UFC Fight Pass.

Dzambekov's acid test, other undercard results

In the co-main event, Umar Dzambekov endured the most durable test of his four-year career and outlasted Roamer Alexis Angulo with an eight-round unanimous decision win.

Dzambekov (12-0, 8 KOs) fought through a problematic right eye to stave off the aggressive Angulo (28-4, 23 KOs), gaining incredible experience through victory as the judges awarded the 27-year-old southpaw victory with scores of 80-72, 79-73 and 77-75.

The power-punching Angulo's only losses had come at the highest levels against Edgar Berlanga (UD10) in 2022, David Benavidez (RTD 10) in 2020 and Gilberto Ramirez (UD12) in 2018.

Junior welterweight contender Cain Sandoval (16-0, 14 KOs) caught outmatched late replacement opponent Jonathan Jose Eniz (36-23-1, 17 KOs) in the corner during the second round and unleashed an onslaught to end their scheduled eight rounder incredibly early, as referee Rudy Barragan waved off the action at the 2:31 mark.

Featherweight phenom and surefire future world champion Iyana “Right Hook Roxy” Verduzco (5-0, 1 KOs) competed in her first eight-rounder. She passed another test with flying colors by scoring a unanimous decision win against Celene Roman (6-4-1, 0 KOs), as each of the judges scored the contest 79-73.

Daniel "Chucky" Barrera (9-1-1, 4 KOs) bounced back and returned to the win column by besting Basilio Franco (10-4, 8 KOs) by unanimous decision in an eight-round junior bantamweight bout via scores of 80-72, 79-73, 79-73. Barrera suffered the first loss of his career last time out in February.

Yeritsyan-Brown conjures up an upset

Headlining the preliminary portion of the action on YouTube was a bout between Gor Yeritsyan and Vernon Brown, and the welterweight fight delivered the most shocking result of the night.

Yeritsyan was pitching a one-sided shutout through six rounds of their scheduled eight-rounder when Brown found lightning in a bottle and landed a chin-rattling left hook that dropped Yeritsyan midway through the seventh.

Yeritsyan was clearly hurt, never recovered and was seemingly out on his feet for the rest of the round as the southpaw Brown kept piling on unanswered punches, forcing referee David Solivan to step in and stop the action at the 2:46 mark of the round.

The Freddie Roach-trained Yeritsyan (20-2, 16 KOs) would have been well served to take a knee to survive the round and see the final frame, but he got caught in the fire and went up in flames once "Sub Zero" Brown (14-2-1, 10 KOs) iced him for the shocking stoppage win.

Before the seventh round got underway, Solivan had the ringside physician inspect Brown, a 36-year-old from Chicago, due to the quantity and quality of shots he was absorbing. Solivan even gave Brown several hard warnings to "show him something" before the fight-altering punch landed.

Yeritsyan, a 30-year-old from Armenia, came into the clash yearning to make a mark by winning the Zuffa Boxing title, but the loss seriously derailed any championship plans for the foreseeable future.

Kicking off the action on the night was a less-climactic featherweight fight between Jenelyn Olsim (0-0-1) and Jessica Radtke Maltez (1-2-2), resulting in a four-round majority draw.
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Re: Callum Walsh vs. Elias Espadas | UFC Fight Pass - June 21, 2025

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Ruthless-RKO wrote: 16 Jun 2025, 08:25 Geometry DashCallum Walsh says he is ready to prove he’s one of the best

When Callum Walsh first laced up the gloves and stepped between the ropes, there was no indication of what was to come.

“I actually lost my first amateur fight,” he told BS during a recent conversation at the Wild Card Boxing Club, where he is training for a matchup with Elias Espadas on June 21 at Chumash Casino in Santa Ynez, California. “Eleven years old, lost my first amateur fight.”

But, Walsh points out, he soon got into the swing of things. He thereafter won what he recalls as “a crazy amount in a row,” and at age 15 competed for, and won, his first of what would be six national titles.

Like his banner mate Cain Sandoval – who is also, like Walsh, trained by Freddie Roach and promoted by Tom Loeffler – Walsh first picked up the sport not because he was a miscreant who needed his aggression tamed and focused, but because his father was a former boxer who encouraged his son to follow in his footsteps.

Born in Cobh (pronounced “Cove”), on a small island in Cork Harbour best known as the final port of call for the Titanic, Walsh was, he says, “always around boxing.”

“I never grew up watching boxing,” he said. “That’s not how I got into it. It’s just what I knew. I was always around the boxing gyms. And once I got older, I would just go to the gym, Monday, Wednesday, Friday nights. Go to school and go to the gym. When you grow up doing something, it’s just what you know. I didn’t know any different.”

By the time he won a European gold medal at the age of 16 in 2017, he began to think “I can try and do something with this.”

He contemplated taking aim at the Olympics until the COVID pandemic pushed the Tokyo Games from 2020 to 2021. He decided to try his luck at becoming a disciple of Roach, but getting into the US from Ireland at the height of the pandemic was not an option. So he flew to Tijuana, Mexico, tried twice (and failed) to walk across the border and managed to gain entry on a third attempt when he said he was visiting his father, who by then lived in Long Beach, California.

Walsh made his way to Hollywood and knocked on the door of the Wild Card. Roach looked him up and down, and told him if he wanted to train there he’d have to spar first. So he did, putting in several rounds with Blair Cobbs. Roach told him to come back the next day, which he did. Ultimately, Roach took him on, and Walsh has trained there since, amassing a record of 13-0 (11 KOs).

Partly because of the restrictions imposed by COVID, Walsh trained and sparred at Wild Card every day for a year before making his pro debut, a grounding he thinks gave him a stable base that he might not otherwise have had.

“It’s something that will never get old,” he said of training in one of the sport’s great cathedrals. “You don’t get used to it, especially because you just don’t know who’s going to be here on any given day. It’s constantly changing. There’s constantly stuff going on. Every day is exciting.”

At first, Walsh chose to continue soaking up the excitement when he left the gym, as well, but after two years living in Hollywood, he has moved to the more tranquil surroundings of the Ventura farmlands.

“I had to move back to the quiet, the country,” he said with a smile.

Despite being taken the distance just twice in his young career, Walsh doesn’t feel the need to start banking more rounds in the ring for experience.

“I get enough rounds in the gym, to be honest,” he said. “I get the rounds in sparring. I don’t really need any unnecessary damage. I don’t need to fight 10 rounds; I spar 10 rounds comfortably. I know it’s different to a fight. But still, I know I can do it. I get paid the same whether I knock them out in the first round or it goes 10 rounds, and nobody wants to go in there and fight for 10 rounds and take damage. I’d rather go in there and get the fight done and move on to the next one and be healthy and happy.”

At the time we talk, Walsh hasn’t yet watched tape of Espadas, 23-6-1 (16 KOs), although he says he will do so closer to the fight. He prefers to focus on himself and, at least initially, leave the planning to Roach.

“Obviously, my team has a plan,” he said. “Freddie has a plan. Right now, I’m not too worried. I’m just getting in shape, getting ready, and to be honest, for me, you know, once I’m 100 percent ready, it doesn’t matter who I fight. Doesn’t matter what their style is. I’ll figure them out eventually.”

The fact is, Walsh continued, “I believe when I'm at my best, I can fight anybody and beat anybody on any given night. And I don't like to think too much about my opponents. I don't really like the whole face-off thing. I prefer to just train and be ready and just simply get in there and do my job. I think of this as a job. My job is to fight, and I'll fight anybody.”

Even if he hasn’t yet seen much of Espadas, he knows about him, knows that he is coming off an impressive April outing when he fought to a draw against unbeaten Sadriddin Akhmedov.

“So he’s coming at his best, coming off two full camps,” Walsh said. “So I think if I go in there and make a big statement, it is a good way to measure myself. But I think these are the fights that I need. I believe I’m one of the best fighters in the world, and I just need to prove it.”
Pedro Guevara (42-4-1, 22 KOs) is a formidable opponent with significant experience, having previously held a world title at 108 pounds. Known for his resilience, Guevara has never been stopped in his career and is coming off a close victory over Andrew Moloney this past May. While he may not carry the star power of an Estrada, Guevara’s experience and toughness promise a competitive match.
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