Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 06 Sep 2025, 18:09

Valdez - Decision
1
100%
Valdez - T/KO
0
No votes
DRAW
0
No votes
Medina - T/KO
0
No votes
Medina - Decision
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 1

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Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Oscar Valdez set for September 6 ring return in Mexico

Oscar Valdez is set to embark on the comeback trail.

Boxing Scene has learned that the former two-division titlist will return to the ring on September 6. Neither an opponent nor definitive location was determined as this goes to publication, though the event will take place in his native Mexico.

The fight will be the first since Valdez, 32-3 (24 KOs), suffered a sixth-round stoppage defeat to WBO 130lbs titlist Emanuel Navarrete, 39-2-1 (32 KOs; 1 No-Contest), last December 7 in Phoenix, Arizona. It marked the first time he was ever stopped through 35 pro bouts.

During his downtime, Valdez – a two-time Olympian for Mexico – and his team opted to reunite with original head trainer Manny Robles. The decision meant an end to his time spent with Eddy Reynoso, with whom Valdez parted on amicable terms after six years and 12 fights.

Valdez, 34, previously held the WBO 126lbs and WBC 130lbs titles.

His featherweight title reign ran from July 2016 through his divisional departure in 2019 when he moved up to the junior lightweight division.

The tail end of his stay at 126lbs included his first full year with Reynoso, under whom he captured his second major title. Valdez claimed the WBC 130lbs belt with an emphatic tenth-round knockout of Miguel Berchelt in their February 2021 ESPN headliner from the MGM Grand bubble in Las Vegas, Nevada.

In addition to the highlight reel knockout, Valdez also ended his countryman’s four-plus year title reign.

Just one successful defense followed – a twelve-round, unanimous decision over Robson Conceicao in their September 2021 meeting in Valdez’s childhood hometown of Tucson, Arizona. The event was marred by a drug testing controversy, though one which ultimately moved forward after the presiding commission and the ABC (Association of Boxing Commissions) cleared Valdez of any wrongdoing.

Valdez dropped his WBC title one fight later when he suffered his first career defeat at the hands of Shakur Stevenson in their April 2022 WBC/WBO 130lbs unification clash in Las Vegas.

He is just 2-2 since that night, with both losses coming to Navarette. Valdez sat out more than a year following the loss to Stevenson, and returned with a repeat win over Adam Lopez. Their May 2023 rematch came three-and-a-half years after Valdez survived a knockdown to stop Lopez in the seventh round of their November 2019 meeting, his first fight at 130lbs.

The second victory over Lopez was followed by a quick ring turnaround, as Valdez was back at it less than three months later in a bid for Navarrete’s WBO 130lbs title. Their entertaining August 2023 all-Mexico clash saw Navarrete prevail via unanimous decision at Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.

Valdez had overcome a broken orbital bone in his right eye, which – coupled with the defeat – admittedly left him in a state of depression. He was able to rebound with a seventh-round knockout of Australia’s Liam Wilson, at the same Glendale venue last March 29 in arguably his finest performance since his win over Berchelt.

It remains his last victory to date, though he’s taken the steps to make sure that changes for the better in September.

In reuniting with Robles, Valdez joins a red-hot stable. Among the notable clients are: lineal and WBO 115lbs queen Mizuki “Mimi” Hiruta; WBA interim 168lbs titlist Armando Resendiz, fresh of his upset win over Calbe Plant; former two-division titlist Brandon Figuerao; and top 154lbs contender Serhii Bohachuk.

“I'm motivated and eager to return,” Valdez insisted at the time of his announced relink with Robles.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 05 Sep 2025, 03:14, edited 6 times in total.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. TBA - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

MANNY ROBLES REVEALS SURPRISE OSCAR VALDEZ REUNION, EXPECTATIONS BEFORE SEPT. 6 RETURN

Many, including Top Rank chief Bob Arum, wanted Oscar Valdez to retire after witnessing Emanuel Navarrete dismantle him en route to a sixth-round knockout in their Dec. 7 rematch.

The former two-division world champion (32-3, 24 KOs) was stopped for the first time in his career that night, after 12 years and 34 previous professional fights — including a dozen at championship level.

Instead, as Boxing Scene first reported, the 34-year-old reunited with a familiar face in highly regarded head coach Manny Robles and has a Sept. 6 fight booked to return in his native Mexico.

It'll mark the first time he competes on home soil in 12 years, and perhaps that welcoming environment is what he needs most now, especially seeing how Daigo Higa and Carlos Canizales were received in contrasting homecomings this past week.

Higa (21-3-3, 19 KOs) honoured his promise to retire if it wasn't third time lucky challenging for a bantamweight title, while Canizales (28-3-1, 20 KOs) climbed off the canvas to stop Panya Pradabsri five rounds into their junior flyweight title rematch.

Valdez is older than both men, endured more wars and finds himself in the middle of a 130-pound division where youthful contenders are making a name for themselves.

Eduardo Nunez (28-1, 27 KOs) will make the first defence of his newly-won IBF title that same night against Christopher Diaz (30-5, 19 KOs), while Raymond Ford and Hayato Tsutsumi (both 26) have Saudi assignments live on a DAZN PPV bill headlined by Moses Itauma-Dillian Whyte on Aug. 16.

Elsewhere there's renewed optimism about WBC's No. 1-ranked contender Eduardo "Rocky" Hernandez (37-2, 32 KOs) while Britain's Ryan Garner (18-0, 9 KOs) isn't far off world level either. Both are 27 and entering their prime years.

While Valdez is unlikely to face stiff opposition in his first fight back under Robles, there's renewed optimism that he can finish a successful career on a high — especially judging by performances training alongside younger foes recently.

"He's been holding his own against elite sparring, which tells me a lot, he's still in a good place mentally and physically," Robles told The Ring.

"Obviously being in the gym and the ring are two different things, but I expect him to be coachable, work on a few things we've been honing, want him to execute and importantly show me he wants to grow, become better and we'll take it from there."

Valdez spent six years and 11 fights under Eddy Reynoso's tutelage, having departed Robles in 2018 having broken his jaw during a bittersweet 12-round WBO featherweight title defence against Scott Quigg.

At the time, the coaching change was deemed natural progression to a more defensively responsible mindset and Valdez wanted to "become an even better all-around boxer and fighter," which included an eventual move up in weight.

While he notched two more title defences over unbeaten opposition before joining the 130-pound division, the jury's still out on whether the Nogales man fully maximised his potential after failing to solve the Navarrete puzzle over 18 rounds — Denys Berinchyk and more recently Charly Suarez had no problem doing so a year apart.

How did this return come about?

"He showed up in Los Angeles and caught me by surprise on my doorstep, in the gym, having flown in from Mexico. He asked for us to have a word, we sat down behind closed doors and had a good conversation. After some back and forth, we decided to give it another go but I said immediately after his last fight with Navarrete, should he retire?

"I said I would hate for him to go out this way given all he's accomplished and suddenly a few months later, he shows up at my gym. I told him, 'I can't promise you anything but I'll give 100% of myself and expect the same in return, give me 100% and if we can do that, we'll do some positive things.' Hopefully take it one fight at a time, get good results."

Valdez reached out a "couple" months ago and has been quietly building back to a return ever since.

Ranked No. 14 with the WBC, BoxRec rating him as the world's 11th-best feels disingenuous — though time will tell whether he's still got it or this is another false dawn.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 07 Aug 2025, 05:28, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Press Release

Former two-time champion Oscar Valdez hopes to kickstart another world title run when he returns to action against San Antonio, Texas native Ricky "El Castigo" Medina in a ten-round junior lightweight main event on Saturday, Sept. 6th at Domo Binacional in Valdez's hometown of Nogales, Mexico. A two-time Mexican Olympian, Valdez has not fought on home soil since 2013. “Oscar Valdez is a proud warrior, and this is a great opportunity for him to return home and prove he still has what it takes to contend at 130 pounds,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “Oscar has been with Top Rank since he turned pro, and we are in his corner as he attempts to become a three-time world champion.”

Valdez (32-3, 24 KOs) captured the WBO featherweight championship with a knockout win over Matias Rueda and defended it six times. He then moved up to junior lightweight, where he scored a highlight-reel knockout against Miguel Berchelt in February 2021 to claim the WBC crown. The 34-year old suffered his first pro loss in an April 2022 unification showdown against Shakur Stevenson. He returned to form with a decision over Adam Lopez the following May, setting up an all-Mexico clash with Emanuel Navarrete in August 2023. Valdez dropped a unanimous decision to Navarrete, and following a TKO win over Liam Wilson, lost the Navarrete rematch by sixth-round knockout.

Medina (16-3, 9 KOs) went 13-0 with seven knockouts before a decision loss to eventual champion Raymond Ford in June 2022. He rebounded later that year with a first-round stoppage of Steve Garagarza and outpointed Juan Antonio Lopez the following May. Medina suffered back-to-back decision losses, first on enemy turf against SoCal native George Acosta in December 2023, then to unbeaten contender Geo Lopez last September. Medina bounced back in December by dispatching Angel Hernandez Pillado in three.

Promoted by Zanfer Boxing and Top Rank, tickets to Valdez-Medina are available now via www.xticket.mx.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Week!! :box:
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

will air on ESPN Deportes.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Night! :box:
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

ANOTHER TITLE SHOT FOR OSCAR VALDEZ? HE MUST DOMINATE RICHARD MEDINA

Oscar Valdez envisions returning to his hometown as a world champion again before he retires.

With that mission in the back of his mind, the former featherweight and junior lightweight titleholder is back in Nogales, Mexico, for a less meaningful fight he must win to get back into championship contention in the 130-pound division.

A rejuvenated Valdez (32-3, 24 KOs) is set to box Richard Medina (16-3, 9 KOs) of San Antonio, Texas, in a 10-round main event ESPN Deportes will televise Saturday night from Domo Binacional.

Valdez, 34, will fight for the first time since WBO junior lightweight champ Emanuel Navarrete knocked him out in the sixth round of their rematch December 7 in Phoenix.

“In boxing, I have had my ups and downs,” Valdez said during a press conference Thursday in Nogales. “In the Olympic Games, I tried to get a medal, but it didn’t happen. As a professional, I became a world champion, but then I suffered a loss. I was able to become a champion again, but suffered another loss as well. But that’s life. There will always be ups and downs.”

His second defeat to Mexico’s Navarrete devastated Valdez because he lost by knockout for the first time as a pro or amateur.

Bob Arum, Valdez’s longtime promoter, urged the two-time Olympian to retire. Arum told The Ring he views Valdez as someone who would be a successful trainer or broadcaster once he’s finished fighting.

Valdez appreciates Arum’s concern for his health, but he still believes there are junior lightweight champions he can beat.

“The main goal for me right now is to become a world champion again,” Valdez said. “I want to return to Nogales as a world champion, and I want to be your champion. But in order to do that, I have to get through this fight. I’m taking this fight very seriously. I respect Ricky Medina a lot. I have seen him fight. He is strong and young, and he has the same dream that I have. All boxers want to become a world champion, and that’s why we are all here.”

Medina, 24, hasn’t fought anyone as accomplished or experienced as Valdez, who has lost only to three-division champ Shakur Stevenson (24-0, 11 KOs) and twice to Navarrete (39-2-1, 32 KOs, 1 NC).

FanDuel lists Valdez as an 18-1 favorite, yet simply winning won’t suffice.

Valdez realizes he must dominate his hungry, younger opponent to prove he remains a legitimate contender. The WBC is the only sanctioning organization that has the 14th-rated Valdez in its top 15 and he is no longer listed in The Ring’s top 10.

“I need to make clear in this fight who will go on to fight for a world title,” Valdez said. “I want to be a world champion again, but in order to do that I have to win and give the example that in life you can come back from any defeat.”

ESPN Deportes’ coverage of the Valdez-Medina undercard is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m. ET (3 a.m. BST).
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Valdez, a former featherweight and junior lightweight titleholder, and the unheralded Medina both weighed in at 127.9lbs.

Junior featherweight - ten rounds
Israel Ramirez (121.5lbs) vs. Jose Amaro (123lbs)

Junior featherweight - eight rounds
Angel Patron (123lbs) vs. Carlos Vargas (123lbs)

Junior welterweight - six rounds
Erick Fernando Campos (139.3lbs) vs. Omar Garcia (136.7lbs)

Lightweight - four or six rounds
Luis Corona Parra (133.8lbs) vs. Yohan Orduno (130.1lbs)
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Date: September 6, 2025
Location: Domo Binacional - Avenida Plutarco Elías Calles s/n, Colonia Las Bellotas, Nogales, Sonora 84060, Mexico
Stream: ESPN KnockOut (TBC)
Start time: 8 pm ET | 5 pm PT | 1 am UK

Fight Card

10 Round Super Featherweight Bout
Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina

10 Round Super Bantamweight Bout
Jose Ramirez Maciel vs. Jose Amaro Guerrero

8 Round Super Bantamweight Bout
Angel Patron Cruz vs. Carlos Vargas Jaquez

8 Round Super Featherweight Bout
Ricardo Emmanuel Gonzalez Goy vs. Leobardo Quintana Sanchez

6 Round Super Featherweight Bout (swing bout)
Luis Corona Parra vs. Yohan Orduno

--------

6 Round Super Bantamweight Bout
Juan Diego Garcia Ortega vs. Brandon Daniel Quinones Leon

6 Round Featherweight Bout
Jose Ramirez vs. Oscar Rodolfo Carbajal Gomez

6 Round Welterweight Bout
Oscar Gabriel Cortez Arredondo vs. Fernando Gutierrez Cisneros

6 Round Lightweight Bout
Jose Gabriel Armenta Cota vs. TBA

6 Round Super Flyweight Bout
Yoselyn Perez Lopez vs. TBA

6 Round Welterweight Bout
Christian Emir Solorzano Espinoza vs. Julio Cesar Lopez

4 Round Super Lightweight Bout
Juan Francisco Fonseca Jr vs. TBA

4 Round Light Flyweight Bout
Roberto Chavez Inzunza vs. Giovanni Martinez Morales

4 Round Lightweight Bout
Miguel Fernando Vega Barrera vs. TBA
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »



Apparently this was a robbery
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

97-93, 100-90 and 98-92

Was not wide at all.

Fire the 100-90 judge

It was a competitive fight.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by goose 5 »

This was no robbery, but the scores were too wide and Valdez had a bad last round. 96-94 Valdez on my card but he looked bad.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

UNDERCARD RESULTS

Junior featherweights Israel Ramirez (23-2, 12 KOs) and Jose Amaro (12-0-1, 4 KOs) fought to a no contest. The fight was stopped at 1:18 of round three due to a cut above Ramirez's left eye caused by an accidental headbutt.

Also in the junior featherweight division, Angel Patron (18-0, 13 KOs) stopped Carlos Vargas (18-3, 13 KOs) at 1:52 of the third round.

Junior welterweight Erick Fernando Campos (7-1, 2 KOs) stopped Omar Garcia (3-4-2) at 2:35 of the fifth round.

Junior lightweight Luis Corona (6-0-1, 4 KOs) prevailed by majority decision over Yohan Orduño (3-1, 3 KOs). The official scores were 58-56 (twice) for Corona and 57-57.
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Re: Oscar Valdez vs. Ricky Medina | ESPN Deportes - September 6, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Oscar Valdez fends off game Richard Medina to score decision

Former two-division champion Oscar Valdez won a tougher than expected unanimous decision over Richard Medina in a 10-round featherweight bout Saturday at Domo Binacional in his hometown of Nogales, Mexico.

It was Valdez's return to action after being stopped in the sixth round by Emanuel Navarrete for the WBC junior lightweight title in December.

The scores of 100-90, 98-92 and 97-93 were wide for a fight that saw Medina (16-4, 9 KOs) remain on his front foot with pressure as Valdez (33-3, 24 KOs) fought off his advances but was unable to hurt his hard-charging opponent.

Valdez, 34, started off strong, wrapping hooks around Medina's gloves and popping a jab to keep "El Castogo" from swarming him on the inside. However, Valdez found that his opponent had a durable chin and refused to back down.

By the middle rounds, Medina had gained momentum and broke through with his onslaught of punches. Valdez found himself on the wrong end of several exchanges and appeared to fade as he was unable to keep Medina from rumbling his way inside.

Valdez regained momentum in Round 8 and slammed looping hooks into Medina's face, knocking out his mouthguard in the process. But Medina, 24, was never in danger and continued to roll forward, absorbing punches just to land a few of his own.

It was clear that Valdez, a former featherweight and super featherweight titleholder, had lost some speed on his fastball against an opponent he would have routed several years ago. But he showed the heart of a champion late and closed out strong to get back into the win column.

Valdez has now alternated between wins and losses in his five fights since dropping a wide decision to Shakur Stevenson in 2022.
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