Boxing
Bam Rodriguez vs Vargas preview: WBA bantamweight title in Glendale
Published
3 weeks agoon
Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez will attempt to win a world title in his third weight class on Saturday, June 13, when he defeats WBA bantamweight champion Antonio Vargas at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona. The 12-round main event caps off the card promoted by Matchroom Boxing in association with Boxlab Promotions, with the main card streaming on DAZN beginning at 7 p.m. ET.
Rodriguez arrives at 118 with a pristine slate
Rodriguez, with a record of 23-0 and 16 knockouts, enters the fight just days after formally leaving the junior bantamweight division. The 26-year-old San Antonio fighter relinquished his WBA, WBC and WBO 115-pound titles this week, and trainer Robert Garcia confirmed that letters have been sent to all three sanctioning bodies. Both the WBC and WBO issued statements declaring their world titles vacant.
His streak at 115 pounds included a seventh-round knockout of Juan Francisco Estrada in June 2024, a tenth-round stoppage of Phumelele Cafu in July 2025 and a tenth-round knockout of Fernando Martinez in November 2025 in Riyad; this victory united three of the four main belts. Rodriguez also holds the WBO flyweight title, which he won in 2023 against Cristian Gonzalez and unified with Sunlit Edwards.
“Recent weight class, same goals,” Rodriguez said after the fight was announced. “Dominate and win all the belts.”
Rodriguez has a storied history in the Phoenix area, where he stopped Edwards at the Desert Diamond Arena in December 2023 and knocked out Estrada at the nearby Footprint Center. The card landed in Glendale after San Antonio’s Frost Bank Center, a favorite Matchroom venue, was held pending a potential San Antonio Spurs playoff date.
Vargas defends as a weighty underdog
Vargas (19-1-1, 11 knockouts) is a 29-year-old former United States Olympian from Kissimmee, Florida, who represented his country at the 2016 Rio Games. He won the WBA interim title against Winston Guerrero in December 2024, was promoted to full champion and fought Daigo Higa to a draw in Japan in July 2025. After repeatedly postponing his fight against former champion Seiya Tsutsumi, Vargas was once again recognized as the full champion of the division.
“It’s the type of fight every fighter dreams of,” Vargas said during fight week. The champion enters as a significant underdog; According to DraftKings Sportsbook, Rodriguez is down 2,500 and Vargas is up 950.
A victory for Rodriguez would make him a three-division world champion. The WBO in its statement this week addressed a potential future meeting between Rodriguez and his bantamweight champion Cristian “Chispa” Medina, while multiple reports indicate Naoya Inoue is a long-term target at 122 pounds.
Undercard TV broadcast
Elif Nur Turhan vs. Gabriela Tellez, IBF women’s lightweight title, 10 rounds. Turhan (13-0, 8 knockouts), of Istanbul’s Turkiye, is defending for the second time the belt she won with a fifth-round stoppage of Beatriz Ferreira in December. The 31-year-old defended her title by split decision in a match against Taylah Gentzen on January 31. Tellez, with a record of 7-0 and 3 knockouts, is a 19-year-old from San Antonio who received her first chance to win a world title. Coached by Jose Benavidez Sr., she stopped Crystal Garcia Nova in her last appearance in February.
Arturo Cardenas vs. Jordan Martinez 2, junior bantamweight…junior featherweight, 10 rounds. Cardenas (17-0-2, 9 knockouts) of Sahuayo, Mexico, and Martinez of Phoenix (16-0-1, 15 knockouts) will face each other in a direct rematch after a draw on February 28 at the same arena. Martinez has a higher knockout percentage while Cardenas relied on his technical approach, and the first fight produced clearly split scorecards.
Adrian Rodriguez vs. Elias Montoya Terraza, lightweight, 10 rounds. The meeting of two undefeated lightweights has at least one undefeated record. Rodriguez is 10-0 with 6 knockouts and Terraza is 13-0 with 8 knockouts.
You may like
Boxing
IBF gives Moses Itauma a shot at the world title – fighting Hrgovic no longer makes sense
Published
15 hours agoon
July 2, 2026
Moses Itauma was given a direct path to the IBF heavyweight title, leaving Queensberry with one obvious question: Why risk it all against Filip Hrgovic?
In a statement sent to World Boxing News, the International Boxing Federation confirmed that it had received official notice on June 26 of Oleksandr Usyk’s resignation as IBF heavyweight champion.
Under championship rules, the governing body ordered top-ranked Frank Sanchez to negotiate with number three contender Moses Itauma for the vacant title. Both have until July 29 to reach an agreement.
Immediately, Hrgovic became an unnecessary obstacle to Itauma’s path to the world title.
When Itauma agreed to face Hrgovic on August 29 at The O2 in London, it was the perfect step for one of boxing’s brightest adolescent heavyweights.
This equation has completely changed.
IBF pays tribute to Usyk
In a statement provided to WBN, the IBF also confirmed Usyk’s reign before confirming the order.
“Over the course of his distinguished career, Usyk has established himself as one of the sport’s elite competitors, and the IBF is honored to recognize him as one of its world champions.
“His talent and commitment to excellence have made a lasting impact on boxing and will continue to inspire future generations of fighters.
“The IBF wishes Oleksandr Usyk continued success in his future endeavors.”
Only after paying tribute to the former champion did the IBF officially order Sanchez and Itauma to negotiate for the vacant world title.
This is an opportunity that many contenders have been chasing for years. Itauma immediately received this opportunity.
Hrgović’s fight no longer makes sense
When Queensberry announced the fight with Hrgovic, promoter Frank Warren described it as a “litmus test” that Itauma was ready for, while DAZN described it as a key fight with world title implications.
These consequences have now become a reality.
No one doubts Itauma’s willingness to fight anyone. He signed a contract with Hrgovic before the world title unexpectedly landed on the table. This is a completely different situation.
Hrgovic remains one of the most perilous heavyweight contenders despite suffering only one loss to Daniel Dubois. Since then, the Croatian has regained momentum with victories over Joe Joyce, David Adeleye and Dave Allen, which put him back among the top contenders in the division.
If an agreement can be reached, the obvious solution would be to replace Hrgović with Sanchez on August 29 in exchange for the vacant IBF heavyweight title.
As compensation, Hrgovic could get the first shot at the recent champion if Itauma defeats Sanchez.
Whether this proves possible depends on whether all involved are willing to restructure the contracts already in place.
The heavyweight story still beckons
The change would also support Itauma in its historic mission, which has already missed one goal.
Itauma’s dream of breaking Mike Tyson’s record as the youngest heavyweight champion is gone, but another goal remains within reach.
If the 21-year-old wins the vacant IBF title before October, he will overtake Floyd Patterson to become the second-youngest heavyweight champion in history.
If he waits until the match against Hrgovic, this chance will be gone forever.
Queensberry matched Itauma with Hrgovic because it seemed like the quickest path to a chance at the championship.
The IBF has now given them an even faster fight.
Unless Hrgovic’s contract can no longer be salvaged, Queensberry should exhaust all options to hire Sanchez instead.
The IBF unexpectedly gave Itauma a world title shot and a chance to become the second-youngest heavyweight champion in history.
It would be arduous to justify giving up this opportunity in favor of unnecessary risk.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.
Boxing
Lennox Lewis ‘admitted’ he should have had one more defeat to former heavyweight champion on his record: ‘You won’
Published
15 hours agoon
July 2, 2026
The former world champion claims Lennox Lewis once admitted he should have retired after three defeats in his professional career.
“The Lion” is considered one of the greatest heavyweights of all time. He retired in 2003 after avenging his only two losses to Oliver McCall and Hasim Rahman.
Lewis also had a successful rematch with Evander Holyfield, who somehow managed to do so defended his world titles after a controversial draw in their first meeting.
However, later that year in 1999, Lewis managed to become the undisputed heavyweight champion after winning by unanimous decision, maintaining his lineal status until his retirement following a sixth-round victory over Vitali Klitschko.
However, already in 1996, many believed that the Briton should have suffered another defeat, this time to Ray Mercer, who had briefly held the WBO title in 1991.
The American eventually vacated the belt and was defeated by Larry Holmes the following year before losing a 10-round unanimous decision to Holyfield in 1995.
“Merciless” then faced Lewis in a battle between two Olympic gold medalists, this time suffering a highly controversial defeat by a 10-round majority.
I’m talking to James SlaterMercer insisted that even Lewis doubted he deserved to win their competition.
“Yeah, I won that fight, man. He admitted it to me. He knows, a fighter knows. I won that fight. He told me, ‘I know you’re going to win.’ I told him, ‘Where’s my half of your check!’
“He said OK. Every time I see him, I tell him I’m still waiting! They were preparing him for the fight [Mike] Tyson. That’s what happened and that’s why they gave him the win.
As it happened, Lewis didn’t face Mike Tyson until 2002, when he secured victory after the eighth round.
Instead, after the controversy with Mercer, there was a rematch with McCall, whom he stopped for the WBC title.
Boxing
The Itauma vs Hrgovic fight will take place on August 29 at The O2
Published
1 week agoon
June 23, 2026
As announced by the promoters, Moses Itauma will face Filip Hrgovic at The O2 in London on Saturday, August 29, in a heavyweight fight scheduled to be broadcast live on DAZN on pay-per-view.
Itauma, 21, is undefeated at 14-0, has 12 knockouts and holds the WBO Intercontinental, WBA International and Commonwealth titles. His last fight was in March, when he defeated American Jermaine Franklin in the fifth round at the Co-op Live gala in Manchester. This fight was his longest since 2023; several of his recent wins have come in the opening round, including stoppages of Dillian Whyte and Demsey McKean.
Hrgovic, 34, of Croatia, has a record of 20-1, 15 knockouts and a bronze medal at the 2016 Olympics. He previously held first place in the IBF ranking. In May he stopped Dave Allen in the third round at Doncasterand his third victory in a row. The escape came after his defeat to Daniel Dubois in June 2024, the only defeat of his career, which saw him overtake David Adeleye and Joe Joyce.
Hrgovic is the most experienced opponent Itauma has faced as a professional. He was stopped once in 21 fights and faced several world-class heavyweights.
“This has all the hallmarks of a classic heavyweight showdown and we were determined to see it through to the end,” said promoter Frank Warren. “This fight is the litmus test that Moses is ready for and it is the one he wanted. Filip believes it will be too much, too soon for the adolescent star. On August 29 at The O2 we will find out what will be another amazing night for British boxing.”
Unlocking the Benefits of Mindful Meditation for Stress Relief
Maximize Your Online Presence with Expert SEO Strategies
Unlocking the Benefits of Mindfulness Meditation for Stress Relief
Trending
-
UK Boxing15 hours agoRe: Official Negotiating Order – Mandatory WBO Welterweight Championship – DevinHaney (champion) vs. Keyshawn Davis (#1 challenger)
-
Female Boxing15 hours agoNataly Delgado is the WBA – World Boxing Association fighter of the month
-
Boxing15 hours agoIBF gives Moses Itauma a shot at the world title – fighting Hrgovic no longer makes sense
-
uncategorized11 hours agoConor Benn Trolls Ryan Garcias Mexican Heritage With Spanish-Language Message
-
uncategorized22 hours agoHarry Greb vs. Mickey Walker: Rediscovering the Lost Classic Match Without Film
-
Video15 hours agoTyson Fury makes ringwalk with Jordan McCann!
-
uncategorized23 hours agoJunto Nakatani Believes Naoya Inoue Fight Proves His Potential for 122 lb World Title Win
-
uncategorized8 hours ago
Boost Your Website Traffic: Effective SEO Strategies for 2024


