Showing posts with label Flyweight Division. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flyweight Division. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2025

Fundora Holds Onto Undisputed Flyweight Crown, Jr. Bantamweight Or Bantamweight Next?

Women’s Boxing is still experiencing the high of the first all women's Boxing card to be held inside the historic Madison Square Garden this past July, which was headlined by the third encounter between Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano, two undisputed world champions in the Jr. Welterweight and Featherweight divisions respectively, who along with current Undisputed Heavyweight world champion Claressa Shields, have served as cornerstones of the sport in the most recent era of Women’s Boxing.  As great and groundbreaking as that trilogy was for the sport overall, as what will likely be the final encounter and quite possibly, the final fight in each future Hall of Famer’s respective career, inevitably the question that should be asked is what fighter or fighters might be able to move into the role of helping to advance the sport further as the next star in the sport. Enter Gabriela Fundora.


Fundora, who comes from a fighting family and is the sister of current Men's WBC Jr Middleweight world champion Sebastian Fundora, has established herself as a world champion in her own right as the current Women’s Undisputed Flyweight world champion. Fundora first became a world champion in October 2023 with a fifth round knockout of IBF champion Arely Mucino, and quickly went on to fully unify the Flyweight division, becoming Undisputed world champion one year later after two successful defenses of her IBF crown  by knocking out unified WBC/WBA/WBO world champion Gabriela Alaniz in seven rounds. 


Following a successful defense of her undisputed crown in April of this year with a seventh round stoppage of Marilyn Amaya, Fundora, 16-0, with 8 Knockouts entered the ring for her next title defense on September 20th at the Fantasy Springs Resort and Casino in Indio, CA. Originally, Fundora was to defend against South American Flyweight champion Ayelen Granadino of Argentina, but she was denied entry into the United States for the bout due to undisclosed reasons.  In stepped current North American Boxing Federation Flyweight champion Alexas Kubicki from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada on short notice and the fight went on as scheduled. 


A recurring theme of not only Gabriela Fundora's fights, but also those of her brother's is that both are blessed with height and reach advantages that give them an advantage for the weight classes they are in over most of their opposition. In this case, Fundora used her 5’9 frame to keep Kubicki, who entered the bout with a record of 13-1, with 2 Knockouts, on the outside where Kubicki simply could not avoid Fundora’s frequent straight left, right hook combinations from the southpaw stance. Whenever Kubicki was able to close the distance and get on the inside of Fundora's reach, she was ineffective as the champion was able to tie her up in a clinch before she could get any significant offense off.


Despite being very “Game” and stepping into a world championship bout on short notice, Kubicki simply had no answers or head movement to be able to avoid Fundora's offense as the combat became increasingly one-sided as the bout went on. Seeing the effects of the punishment she was sustaining over most of the fight, Referee Ray Corona mercifully stopped the bout at :43 of the seventh round. Although Kubicki was not knocked down, the stoppage was appropriate. No one can take anything away from Alexas Kubicki and the heart she showed in this fight. All too often, however, fighters tend to be too brave for their own good and if a fighter's corner is not proactive in not only seeing the signs that their charge is out gunned, but also recognizing that they are taking too much punishment with no answer to turn things around, it is the referee's responsibility to protect the fighter from themselves.


With her latest title defense behind her, the obvious question is what's next for Gabriela Fundora? Outside of a possible fight against Ayelen Granadino, who was supposed to challenge her in this fight, assuming Granadino can either resolve her visa issues to gain entry into the United States or potentially have the bout staged at another location outside of the U.S., this observer believes the now 17-0, with 9 Knockouts Fundora should consider moving up to either the 115lb. Jr. Bantamweight or 118lb. Bantamweight divisions to seek to unify a second division as many female fighters past and present have done in moving up and down in weight based largely on what opportunities might be available both in terms of financially as well as for world championships.  Fundora is only twenty-three years of age and it did not take her long to essentially clean out the 112lb. Flyweight division. Based on her natural advantages physically as well as her skillset, it is hard to envision her being challenged at this point in the Flyweight division, but her status as not only an undisputed world champion, but also one of the sport’s rising stars will likely open opportunities for her as she moves up in weight. 


As has been the case with many great fighters both male and female, this may only be chapter one of what has all the potential of a great career. It may not be long where like Amanda Serrano and Katie Taylor before her, Gabriela Fundora, is viewed as a cornerstone of Women’s Boxing. 


“And That's The Boxing Truth.”


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Sunday, December 1, 2024

Yafai Batters Edwards Into Retirement

The fight between former IBF World Flyweight champion Sunny Edwards and undefeated contender Galal Yafai was one of experience versus youth. Edwards, a former world champion who was looking to get himself back into position to fight for a world championship in his second fight since losing the IBF crown in a unification bout against WBO World Flyweight champion Jesse Rodriguez. With an interim designation on the line between Edwards and Yafai in the WBC’s Flyweight ratings, the winner of the fight would essentially be in position to challenge current WBC world champion Kenshiro Teraji.

What had all the appearance of a high-stakes encounter took place before an enthusiastic crowd at the Resorts World Arena in Birmingham, England on November 30th. In previewing this bout, this observer pointed out that the strategy of Edwards, a fighter with only four knockouts in twenty-one previous fights going into this encounter, and one who was used to going a world championship distance of twelve rounds, would look to try and extend Yafai into the deep waters of the fight, otherwise known as the later rounds. The question was whether he would be able to use what was a significant edge in terms of experience to control the tempo of the fight against a fighter in Yafai, who was only competing in his ninth professional fight, but had six knockouts in his eight career wins leading to this bout.

The combat that occurred in this fight can best be described as one fighter pinning himself to his opponent's chest like a magnet, as well as a masterclass in the implementation and execution of an attack to an opponent’s body. From the opening bell, Yafai put Edwards on the defensive and nearly dropped him with a hook to the head in the opening seconds of the fight. 

In some ways, Yafai’s approach reminded this observer of the approach often implemented by the legendary Hall of Famer Julio Cesar Chavez, Sr. from the standpoint that more often than not, Chavez would pin himself to an opponent's chest where it made it nearly impossible for his opponent to not only move, but more specifically, to get space where that fighter could not only get air, but also attempt to gain control of the pace of the combat. Chavez also had one strategy in implementing this approach, to back his opposition up against the ropes and attack the opponent’s body, then as the opponent gradually slowed down and would drop his hands due to the accumulation of body punches, which not only takes a fighter’s legs away and their ability to move, but also limits the ability to raise their arms, Chavez would land hard thudding punches to the head. 

Yafai essentially brought what yours truly refers to as the “Chavez Attack" back in this fight as he stayed pinned to Edwards and simply did not give him room to breathe. This along with a relentless attack to the body and head, had me questioning after four rounds as to whether Edwards’ corner might stop the fight to prevent their fighter from further punishment. Simply put, much as Chavez did many years ago against opponent after opponent as he carved out his Hall of Fame career, Yafai suffocated Edwards where he simply could not move and could not keep Yafai off of him. Although it is rare for yours truly to be questioning whether a fight that did not feature knockdowns would be stopped after four rounds of a scheduled twelve rounds, it did not take long for the contest to be decided and one fighter was taking a one way beating. 

As the punishment only increased, it would finally and mercifully be brought to a halt by Referee Lee Every, who finally stepped in and put a stop to the fight as Edwards was in a position he was frequently throughout the bout, pinned against the ropes, at 1:10 of round six. Ultimately, there is not much one could say beyond saying that this bout was one-sided and the referee showed mercy when perhaps Edwards’ corner should have stopped the fight sooner.

For Galal Yafai, this signals the most significant victory of his career thus far and it will be interesting to see whether now as the WBC’s mandatory challenger in the Flyweight division will mean that he will challenge Kenshiro Teraji in his next fight. Despite only having nine professional fights, his dominant performance in this fight, which was a risk by his handlers by putting him in a world title elimination bout with limited experience, he has earned the opportunity.

The second loss in Sunny Edwards’ career for the moment appears as though it will be his last as he announced his retirement in the ring after the fight in a post-fight interview with digital subscription sports streaming network DAZN. While Edwards is certainly not the first fighter to declare that he would be hanging up his gloves in the immediate aftermath of a fight after coming out on the losing end, which is often considered an emotional reaction, it is important to remember that this is the second knockout loss he has suffered in his career, but also in a relatively short period after being stopped in nine rounds by Jesse Rodriguez in December of last year in a scenario that was not unlike the one where he found himself in this fight. Furthermore, it is important to keep in mind that Edwards has competed in one of Boxing’s lower weight divisions for his whole career as a 112lb. Flyweight. Although there have been exceptions where fighters in Boxing’s lowest divisions do have long careers, it is not uncommon to see fighters in those weight classes retire at a younger age as compared to fighters who compete at heavier weights. It remains to be seen whether the twenty-eight year old Edwards will have a change of heart down the line, but one should also consider the punishment a fighter suffers not just in a fight itself, but also while in training, which includes sparring as well as often struggles in making weight, which often proves to be more significant in lower weight classes. 

There is after all only so much a body can take and regardless of what weight a fighter competes, it is always better to get out while one still has all their facilities and still have the ability to do other things and enjoy their lives. Although ultimately a fighter is the only one who can make the decision as to when it is time to retire and that is not exclusive to Boxing, but in all combat sports, all too often we see what happens to many fighters later in life where the toll of a long career and the punishment sustained during it leads to significant medical problems. If Sunny Edwards proves to be one of the fighters to end his career on his own terms where he can still enjoy his life, the fruits of his labor, and not suffer the long-term effects that often come with a long career, he may have lost his last fight, but he still left the ring a winner.

“And That's The Boxing Truth." 


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Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Edwards-Yafai Headline Thanksgiving Weekend In Boxing

Boxing’s 112lb. Flyweight division takes center stage this Thanksgiving weekend as an intriguing battle will occur at the Resorts World Arena in Birmingham, England as former IBF Flyweight world champion Sunny Edwards will face undefeated top contender Galal Yafai. An encounter that will determine Interim/Regular champion status in the World Boxing Council (WBC) Flyweight ratings, which can be seen worldwide on digital subscription streaming network DAZN.

While Boxing’s lower weight divisions do not always receive consistent exposure here in the United States, it is often the lower weight classes that offer battles often fought at a high pace and no shortage of action. This fight figures to follow in that tradition. In this case, this particular bout has an interesting contrast in a former world champion looking to get back into position to fight for a world championship going against a young, unbeaten contender, who some might feel has yet to be tested. 

 Edwards is looking to continue momentum after scoring a technical decision win in his last fight in June of this year over Adrian Curiel in a bout that was halted in the ninth round. Now going into his second bout since losing his IBF crown in December of last year in a unification bout with WBO world champion Jesse Rodriguez, a fight where Edwards stopped in nine rounds, the former champion faces what could be a significant threat in the heavy handed Galal Yafai.

Yafai, who is unbeaten in eight professional fights, has scored knockouts in six of those bouts registering a career knockout percentage of 75%. The former 2016 Olympian is coming off of a third round stoppage of Sergio Oliva in September of this year. Although Yafai has shown the ability to score quick knockouts thus far as a professional, he has only been made to go a ten round distance twice in his career and this could be crucial in a scenario where he will not only be facing a former world champion for the first time in his career, but will also be facing an opponent in Edwards, who has significant experience, particularly at the world championship level.

Edwards only has four knockouts in his twenty-one wins, but what he brings with him into this fight is not only more total experience as a professional than Yafai, not only more experience at or near the top of the sport, but more specifically, he is experienced in going the distance. The strategy for the former world champion would therefore appear obvious. To try and avoid Yafai’s power and try to extend him into the deep waters of the fight, the later rounds.

Yafai has shown he can go ten rounds twice in his career. The question will be whether Edwards will be able to control the tempo of the combat from very early in the fight where the pace could put Yafai to the test. It could be a task that may well be easier said than done if Yafai can find a way to limit Edwards’ movement and land his power punches more than periodically. Yafai has shown power in both hands and one of the strategies to combat a tactical boxer that uses significant lateral movement is to not only try to cut the ring off to limit that fighter’s ability to move, but to also try and implement a consistent attack to the body, which could slow the opponent down as the fight progresses.

What will be the goal for the winner of this fight is also obvious. The winner will become the official mandatory challenger for current WBC world champion Kenshiro Teraji. While nothing is set in stone as of this writing, one could assume that a fight between the winner of this fight and Taraji could be aimed for sometime in early 2025. 

“And That's The Boxing Truth." 

Edwards vs.Yafai takes place on Saturday, November 30th at Resorts World Arena in Birmingham, England. The fight as well as its full undercard can be seen worldwide on digital subscription sports streaming network DAZN beginning at 2PM ET/11AM PT. (*U.S. Times Only.*) 

For more information about DAZN including schedules, list of compatible streaming devices, platforms, Smart TVs, availability around the world, local start times in your area, and to subscribe please visit: www.DAZN.com

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Saturday, August 19, 2023

The Galal Yafai Express Rolls On

The story going into the Flyweight bout between 2020 Olympic Gold medalist Galal Yafai and former British Flyweight champion Tommy Frank on August 19th at the Birmingham Arena in Birmingham England was whether Yafai, who entered the bout ranked number fourteen in the world in the World Boxing Council (WBC), could continue on what has been a fast track since beginning his career in February of last year.


Although it is not uncommon to see fighters who are able to benefit from the exposure that the Olympics offers, and to be more specific, those fighters who are able to reach the medal rounds, progress at a faster pace upon embarking on professional careers as compared to those with limited or no amateur experience, Yafai has been able to work his way to a low top-twenty ranking in a world sanctioning organization's rankings in only four professional fights. While Yafai entered the bout unbeaten in four bouts having gone the distance in one of those fights, the question this observer had prior to this encounter was whether Tommy Frank, a fighter with British championship pedigree, would be able to provide Yafai with what would be the first test of his career.


Despite Frank's edge in terms of professional experience over Yafai, it would take the undefeated fast rising contender only a minute and forty seconds to answer that question with an emphatic "NO!" At the sound of the brll to begin the fight, Yafai immediately applied ehat yours truly would call "Suffocating Pressure" on Frank that reminded me of future Hall of Famer Manny Pacquiao in his prime. In that he immediately cut off the ring and swarmed Frank with a near non-stop attack , which sent the former British champion scrambling looking for space.


Unfortunately for Frank, he had no answer and apprared simply unprepared for the type of attack that Yafai put on him. It was not long before Frank would be knocked to the canvas with a short left hook to the head. While Frank was able to get up quickly, it was academic as Yafai continued his relentless assault on his opponent. With Frank pressed up against the ropes with no way to escape, his corner mercifully threw the towel in giving Yafai a statement-making first round stoppage and a successful defense of his WBC International Flyweight championship. 


In previewing this fight and at the beginning of this column, yours truly made reference to Yafai being on a "Fast Track" towards a world championship shot. After this latest performance, perhaps those of us in Boxing media should refer to the track that Yafai is on as a "Train Track" because his performance in stopping Tommy Frank was the Boxing equivalent of a runaway train steamrolling down a track and wiping out whatever is unfortunately standing in the way. While this observer does not partake in deliberate hype tactics, there is simply no other way to describe what happened in this fight.


Although this performance, as emphatic as it was, will probably not move Galal Yafai into a world championship fight in his next fight, he is clearly on track to potentially challenge for a world championship either at or before his tenth professional fight. With five fights to go before fight number 10 for Yafai, the question is if any potential opponent will he able to stand on the track as "The Yafai Express Train" continues barreling down the track in an attempt to stop what has thus far been a runaway train or if it will continue to be full steam ahead as Yafai continues his trip up the 112lb. Flyweight division.


" And That's The Boxing Truth." 


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Friday, August 18, 2023

Galal Yafai vs. Tommy Frank Takes Centerstage August 19th

Originally, August 19th in the world of Boxing was to be spotlighted by the highly anticipated World Light-Heavyweight championship fight between undefeated champion Artur Beterbiev and former Super-Middleweight world champion Callum Smith. As some know, the bout between Beterbiev and Smith has been postponed to January 2024 due to Beterbiev needing time to recover from recent dental surgery. While that fight was initially one of the highlights of the month of August 2023, a bout that could be described by some as under the radar could prove to be interesting. This observer is referring to the Flyweight bout between undefeated Flyweight contender Galal Yafai and former British Flyweight champion Tommy Frank, which will take place at the Birmingham Arena in Birmingham, England that can be seen globally on digital subscription sports streaming network DAZN. 

While the 112lb. Flyweight division does not always get much exposure, particularly here in the United States, one thing that makes this fight interesting is that it offers a chance for a higher ranking in the World Boxing Council’s (WBC) for the WBC International championship. Although a regional championship may not seem significant to some fans, what makes it significant beyond the reality of a higher position in the WBC rankings is the quick pace in which Yafai has gotten to this fight. Galal, the third in the line of the fighting Yafai brothers following Kal and Gamal, will be going into only his fifth professional fight when he faces Tommy Frank. After a decorated amateur career in which he represented Great Britain in both the 2016 and the delayed 2020 Olympics, winning the Gold medal in the 2020 tournament in the Flyweight division, Yafai turned pro in February of last year and won the WBC International title with a fifth round knockout of Carlos Bautista. Yafai being able to enter a regional championship fight in his professional debut is representative of his Olympic pedigree and though a fighter entering that type of fight out of the box as a professional is certainly a roll of the dice, Yafai has thus far proven to be someone who, despite his limited experience as a pro, is on the verge of challenging for a world title in stopping three of his four opponents prior to this fight. 

Going into this fight, Yafai is rated number fourteen in the WBC’s Flyweight ratings and obviously the longer he is able to hold onto the international title, the more likely his ranking will be elevated sooner than later. It should not have to be pointed out however, that there is a risk with each fight and if Yafai should lose, obviously the expedited pace in which he has entered the WBC ratings will be halted. 

In Tommy Frank, Yafai will be facing a veteran of nineteen fights with a record of 15-3-1, with 3 Knockouts. While Frank does not, or at least has not, up to this point shown much punching power in only scoring three knockouts in his fifteen career wins, what he does have that could be an asset is experience in being able to go rounds and it is important to keep in, mind that as Yafai has been on the fast track so far in his career, he has yet to be tested. Frank however, is coming into this fight off of a knockout loss to Jay Harris where he lost the British Flyweight championship being stopped in ten rounds. Perhaps some might see that as a red flag against Frank, or to be more specific, his capability in being able to provide Yafai with a stern test, but it is something that will only be found out once the bell rings.

This fight will headline a card promoted by Eddie Hearn's Matchroom Boxing's NXTGEN series. While obviously that series, which prior to the COVID-19 epidemic was a fixture on Matchroom's schedule in showcasing some of the young, up and coming talent in the Matchroom stable, obviously it has been a few years since the series has been in circulation. A fight like this however, featuring an Olympic Gold medalist, who seems to be racing towards a shot at a world championship perhaps within the first ten fights of his career, going against a former British champion looking to bounce back, seems like a perfect vehicle to reintroduce the series. 

"And That's The Boxing Truth."

Matchroom Boxing NXTGEN: Yafai vs. Frank takes place on Saturday, August 19th at the Birmingham Arena in Birmingham, England. The fight as well as it's full undercard can be seen globally on digital subscription sports streaming network DAZN beginning at 11:45AM ET/8:45AM PT with Before The Bell, which will feature preliminary bouts. This will be followed by the main card, which will begin at 2PM ET/11AM PT.

(*U.S. Times Only.*)

(*Card and Start time Subject to Change.*)

For more information about DAZN including schedules, list of compatible streaming devices, platforms, Smart TVs, availability around the world, local start times in your area, and to subscribe please visit: www.DAZN.com. 

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