Gilberto Ramirez confirmed his future following his loss to David Benavidez, while also addressing the elbow controversy during their cruiserweight clash earlier this month.
“Zurdo” entered the bout as the defending unified champion, but was ultimately vacated of his WBO and WBA world titles following a sixth-round stoppage.
The emphatic finish came thanks to Benavidez’s sustained attack ahead becoming world champion in three divisions.
Even though it was his first fight at 200 pounds, the “Mexican Monster” showed incredible composure and hand speed, causing an unpleasant swelling to appear on his opponent’s right eye.
Ramirez, to his credit, showed great spirit in fighting through pain, but was ultimately defeated by an inherently smaller man.
Since their rivalry, video footage shows that Benavidez elbowed himself during one exchange, causing a slow-motion replay of the incident to circulate on social media.
In response, the 29-year-old insisted it was completely unintentional, although some observers tried to accuse him of using unfair tactics.
Ramirez, however, urged fans not to discredit Benavidez’s performance, while explaining w post on social media that he intends to “come back stronger.”
“Saturday didn’t go as I planned. The loss is painful – the pain is real. But I will sit with it, learn from it and come back stronger. This is not the end.
“I take my hat off to David… His success didn’t come overnight and that only motivates me more. Don’t discredit what he brought – he was the better man that night and I have nothing but respect for him and his team for the preparation they put in. Elbow or not, it’s going to be a fight at the end of the night.”
“If we ever share this ring again, I’ll be better prepared — and I’ll get my revenge. For now, I’m spending time with my family and enjoying the summer.”
At 34, it’s strenuous to predict where Ramirez will go next, and a rematch with Benavidez seems far from realistic.
Instead, the WBC featherlight heavyweight champion has entered preliminary talks for an undisputed showdown with Dmitry Bivol, who must first defeat mandatory challenger Michael Eifert on May 30.