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The Ring 2024 Ratings: Junior Flyweight

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Kenshiro Teraji (right) in a rematch with Masamichi Yabuki (photo: Naoki Fukuda).

The Ring first introduced divisional classifications in 1925. Nearly a century later, it would be no exaggeration to say that these independent rankings are the most respected and most talked about in the boxing world.

The Ring Ratings Panel is comprised of a dozen or so experts from around the world. Opinions are exchanged, debates are held, and the final decision on who should be ranked is made democratically every week. It sounds basic, but it can be a tedious and time-consuming process.

In this article, I’ll be going through each division in reverse order, moving from strawweight to heavyweight. I’ll be looking at each fighter’s accomplishments and looking into my crystal ball to predict what lies ahead.

After a busy first half of 2024, it’s time to put together the next division split.

Next up is the junior flyweight (108lbs), which saw both Ring, WBC and WBA Kenshiro Teraji and WBO equivalent Jonathan Gonzalez vacate their titles (although they remain on the books until they officially fight at flyweight), leaving the division in a state of uncertainty. As always, enjoy the debate and respect the opinions of others.

CHAMPION – KENSHIRO TERAJI

RECORD: 23-1 (14 KOs)

PAST: Teraji won the Japanese and OPBF titles in eight fights. “The Amazing Boy” burst onto the world stage shortly after, winning the WBC title in May 2017 by defeating Ganigan Lopez (MD 12). Teraji improved immensely after winning the world title, defending it eight times against the likes of Lopez (KO 2), Milan Melindo (TKO 7), Jonathan Taconing (TKO 4), and Randy Petalcorin (TKO 4). However, overconfidence caused him to come back from COVID-19 too quickly, and he lost his undefeated record and title to Masamichi Yabuki (TKO 10) in September 2021. To his credit, the 32-year-old Teraji doubled down and showed his class and an extra edge we hadn’t seen before, quickly dispatching Yabuki (KO 3) to regain his title. He then picked up the pace again with a career-best win over previously undefeated Hiroto Kyoguchi (TKO 7), winning The Ring and WBA titles. Since then, he has stopped the rematched Anthony Olascuaga (TKO 9), Hekki Budler (TKO 9) and most recently defeated Carlos Canizales (MD 12).

FUTURE: Teraji is moving up to flyweight, where he will likely face Cristofer Rosales for the vacant WBC title in Japan in October.

No. 1 – JONATHAN GONZALEZ

RECORD: 28-3-1 (14 KOs)

PAST: Gonzalez was a standout amateur who won three national titles, as well as gold at the Central American and Caribbean Games and the Junior World Championships. He turned pro in 2011 amidst great expectations in Puerto Rico. After winning his first 13 fights, he fell miniature against the aggressive former world champion Giovani Segura (KO 4). After righting the ship, he was unexpectedly defeated by Jobert Alvarez (TKO 6). The 33-year-old, agile left-hander, was stopped by Kosei Tanaka while trying to win the WBO 108-pound title and looked like he would never reach his potential until he shocked Elwin Soto (SD 12). He defended twice, impressively defeating rising Japanese fighter Shokichi Iwata (UD 12), but then saw a planned unification bout against Teraji fall apart at the last minute due to a mycoplasma attack. This led to a 16-month layoff before returning in March to face Rene Santiago (UD 12).

FUTURE: Gonzalez is vacating his WBO title and will fight recently named Anthony Olascuaga for the WBO flyweight title, likely in October in Japan on the same card as Teraji-Rosales.

NO. 2 – SIVENATHI AND TSHINGA

RECORD: 13-1 (10 KOs)

PAST: The South African won the national title in his fifth fight. The 25-year-old defeated fellow countryman Siyabonga Siyo (TKO 9) and tough Filipino Ivan Soriano (KO 5). Nontshinga held on after being knocked down in the final round by Christian Araneta (UD 12) in an IBF eliminator. He defeated Hector Flores (SD 12) to win the vacant IBF title in Mexico and defended his title by defeating Regie Suganoba (UD 12). He surprisingly lost the title to Adrian Curiel (KO 2) but made up for lost time in the direct rematch and stopped the Mexican in 10 rounds to regain the title.

FUTURE: He will likely next face mandatory opponent Masamichi Yabuki.

Adrian Curiel (left) and Sivenathi Nontshinga (right) during their IBF title fight at the Guelaguetza Auditorium in Oaxaca, Mexico – Photo: Melina Pizano/Matchroom.

No. 3 – ADRIAN CURIEL

RECORD: 24-6-1 (5 KOs)

PAST: Curiel turned pro in 2016. The Mexican won his first 11 fights before losing a close fight to future IBF strawweight champion Daniel Valladares (UD 10). After getting back on track, he was overtaken by newcomer Sergio Meija (MD 6). “Gatito” kept fighting but was unable to defeat then-unbeaten Joselito Velazquez (UD 10) and future world title challenger Cristian Gonzalez (MD 10). The 25-year-old has bounced back nicely, winning seven of eight, with his only blemish being a technical draw that allowed him to fight IBF champion Sivenathi Nontshinga, whom he knocked out in the second round. He lost a direct rematch when he was stopped in 10 rounds, and most recently lost to Bright Edwards (Tech on December 9).

FUTURE: After losing their last two matches, they need to get back on track.

NO. 4 – ELWIN SOTO

RECORD: 21-3 (13 KOs)

PAST: Soto came out of nowhere to win the WBO title from Angel Acosta (KO 12). The 27-year-old Mexican defended his title three times, most notably defeating Edward Heno (UD 12) and Katsunari Takayama (TKO 9), before losing the title to Gonzalez (SD 12). “La Pulga” had home field advantage when he fought former two-division champion Hekkie Budler (L UD 12), but was outdone. Since then, he has defeated Brian Mosinos (SD 10) and Jose Armenta (UD 10).

FUTURE: Soto injured his left hand during sparring and had to undergo surgery. He returned to training the second week of July with hopes of returning to action by the end of the year.

No. 5 – CARLOS CANIZALES

RECORD: 26-2-1 (19 KOs)

PAST: The talented Venezuelan first caught the eye when he left his homeland to face WBA titleholder Ryoichi Taguchi (D 12). He returned home and racked up three wins before heading overseas again and making a name for himself in Asia, defeating Reiya Konisha (UD 12), Bin Lu (TKO 12) and Sho Kimura (UD 12). The 31-year-old was unexpectedly stopped by an unheralded Esteban Bermudez (TKO 6), but returned with four wins, most notably stopping faded former WBC champion Ganigan Lopez (KO 4) and a WBA eliminator against Daniel Matellon (TD 8). He gave Teraji everything he had, but ultimately lost his Ring/WBA/WBC title fight via a 12-round majority decision. He has since returned with a win.

FUTURE: A fight is scheduled against Petchmanee CP Freshmart for the vacant WBC 108-pound title.

No. 6 – MASAMICHI YABUKI

RECORD: 16-4 (15 KOs)

PAST: Yabuki had a rocky start to his pro career, losing three of his first 10 fights. He was defeated by future three-weight champion Junto Nakatani (UD 4), current WBA flyweight titleholder Seigo Yuri Akui (TKO 1) and talented Cuban Daniel Matellon (SD 8). The 32-year-old power puncher won three fights before winning the national title. As an underdog, he defeated Teraji (TKO 10) but was soundly defeated in three rounds in a direct rematch. Since then, he has had impressive victories over Thanongsak Simsri (TKO 7) and Ronald Chacon (TKO 11). He tore his Achilles tendon and spent 14 months on the sidelines before defeating Kevin Vivas (TKO 4) in March.

FUTURE: He will be hoping to become a two-time world champion when he faces Nottingham for the IBF title later this year.

Carlos Cañizales (left) fights back from a nasty injury and beats Daniel Matellon (left) – Photo: Nelson Quispe – Boxeo de Primera

No. 7 – SHOKICHI IWATA

RECORD: 13-1 (10 KOs)

PAST: Iwata, who has amateur wins over Takuma Inoue and Kosei Tanaka, turned professional in America in December 2018. The 28-year-old has won Japanese and OPBF titles in just nine fights. Iwata defeated Toshimasa Ouchi (UD 8) before crushing him in a single round in a rematch. He gained invaluable experience by defeating former world title challenger Kenichi Horikawa (UD 12). He lost to the wily Puerto Rican Jonathan Gonzalez (UD 12) in a WBO title fight, but has returned with four wins, including stopping former strawweight champion Rene Marc Cuarto (TKO 6) and most recently Jahzeel Trinidad (TKO 6).

FUTURE: He could face Jairo Noriega for the vacant WBO title in Japan in October.

No. 8 – CHRISTIAN ARANETA

RECORD: 24-2 (19 knockouts)

PAST: Araneta has been a professional since 2013 and has won his first 17 fights back home in the Philippines. The 29-year-old left-hander lost his first IBF eliminator to Daniel Valladares (RTD 4) in Mexico. After two wins, he lost a close fight to Nontshinga (UD 12) in another eliminator, this time in South Africa. He has won five fights since then, most recently defeating Arvin Magramo (TKO 1).

FUTURE: He is number one in the IBF, so he will fight for another fight in Nottingham.

NO. 9 – FOREVER SIMSRI

RECORD: 35-1 (32 KOs)

PAST: The hard-hitting Thai defeated his first 24 opponents before coming up miniature against Yabuki (TKO 7). The 24-year-old returned to winning ways with a win over Miel Fajardo (UD 12) to win the OPBF title. He recently defended his regional title by stopping John Paul Gabunilas (TKO 5).

FUTURE: He is ranked in the top five of the IBF and WBO rankings and his ambition will be to continue to develop and seek opportunities once vacancies are filled in three of the four sanctioning bodies.

No. 10 – SUGANOB REGION

RECORD: 15-1 (5 KOs)

PAST: The Filipino picked up wins over compatriots Jake Amparo (UD 8), Jerome Baloro (UD 10) and Marc Vicelles (TD 8) to earn a shot at the IBF title. He had to leave his homeland for South Africa to face Nontshinga and was defeated on points in 12 rounds. The 26-year-old has since won twice and looks ready to get going again.

FUTURE: We are hoping for a second world title fight and are clearly considering the winner of the Iwata-Noriega fight to fight for the vacant WBO title.

At the bend: Miel Fajardo, Jairo Noriega, Erick Rosa, Kyosuke Takami and Jayson Vayson

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Boxing

Mike Tyson had absolutely no chance of knocking out Jake Paul

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Mike Tyson comeback black

One of the hottest topics surrounding Mike Tyson’s return at the age of 58 was the possibility of the boxing legend scoring a knockout of Jake Paul.

WBN has weighed in on this topic several times, questioning the validity of five-second training clips that revealed nothing about Tyson’s abilities at this overdue age. One of the most intriguing observations during the preparations was the opinion of UFC commentator Daniel Cormier.

Speaking on his show “Funky and the Champ,” Cormier reflected on Tyson’s social media videos and offered an informed opinion on the meaning of the clips.

“I understand that [he is in amazing shape at 58]and I understand what he is saying [he feels as though he can compete]– Cormier said. “And I agree that when he hits the pads with Rafael Cordeiro, it looks like there’s still something left in him.

“But then I watch Jake Paul fight Mike Perry. I saw Jake Paul get overwhelmed to the point where he started to feel uncomfortable. It looked like Mike Perry had a chance. But Jake has a reserve tank he can go to and benefit from because he’s 28 years ancient. Then he comes back and finally finishes Mike Perry.

“At the beginning of the fight, Mike Perry gets beaten up and dropped. He looks trained and unmatched. This worries me because what if it looks like a 58-year-old man fighting a 28-year-old man while Mike can’t employ the backup tank to stay and compete with this newborn kid? I think it’s a failure for Jake Paul because if you beat Mike Tyson, everyone will love him.

He added: “What if Mike knocks him out? It’s over. Everything is ready. This would be the backfire of all time. If he gets knocked out, nothing like that has ever happened in the history of the sport.”

Unfortunately for Tyson, this revenge backfired spectacularly, as the former heavyweight champion’s return was the only event that bombed. Tyson had nothing left twenty years after he had nothing left in his tank and no desire to box in his mind.

Paul parlayed this into a money-making scheme that would forever be a success for him and his company, but would be poorly received by the die-hard boxing fraternity.

Cormier’s words resonate, especially after what happened in the ring when Mike Tyson struggled to shift into first gear, warning former fighters thinking about returning after 50.

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Lauren Price looks to win Jonas vs Habazin with an undercard victory

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Lauren Price

Lauren Price MBE will defend her world title for the first time on Saturday, December 14 at the Exhibition Center in Liverpool, while the Welsh champion plans to stage an all-British unification clash with welterweight rival Natasha Jonas, which will headline the Collision Course that night.

Price defends her WBA welterweight title against undefeated Colombian challenger Bexcy Mateus on the same night as Jonas attempts to unify the IBF and WBC titles with Ivana Habazin as part of BOXXER’s ‘Collision Course’ fight night, which can be seen live and exclusively on Sky Sports in the UK UK and Ireland and Peacock in the US.

Price MBE (7-0, 1 KO) made history with an excellent performance, defeating former undisputed welterweight world ruler Jessica McCaskill in front of her fans in Cardiff in May.

Price, the first Welsh boxer to win Olympic gold, once again entered the record books by becoming the country’s first world champion in just her seventh professional fight. The 30-year-old from Ystrad Mynach, who has yet to lose a round as a professional, will now defend her world titles for the first time as she focuses on dominating the welterweight division.

Mateus (7-0, 6 KO), ranked No. 5 in the WBA rankings, is undefeated in the professional ranks and has won all but one of her seven fights by knockout. The 29-year-old from Bogota, fighting outside her native Colombia for the first time, will now have her first chance at global fame, with her goal to dethrone Price and take the top spot in the welterweight division.

Lauren Price said: “I’m excited to defend my belts and complete what has been an crucial year for me. I have full respect for Mateusz. I will prove that I am the best in the division and I will not let anything or anyone stand in my way of being undisputed.”

BOXXER Founder and CEO Ben Shalom said: “It’s a massive night for the women’s welterweight division with three world champions competing. Natasha Jonas returns to her hometown for a mandatory unification fight against Ivana Habazin, and Lauren Price defends her world titles against undefeated challenger Bexcy Mateus. The fight for the undisputed continues. If Natasha and Lauren win on December 14, it will set the stage for a massive “Battle Of Britain” world title unification fight next year.

There’s reason to celebrate as BOXXER delivers a Christmas cracker to end the year. In addition to the world championship fights between Natasha Jonas and Lauren Price, fight fans can expect a gala full of drama and entertainment.

Undefeated Irishman Stephen McKenna (15-0, 14 KO) will face English champion Lee Cutler (14-1, 7 KO) in an invigorating super welterweight fight for the silver WBC International title.

McKenna impressed fans in his three-round fight against Joe Laws last August at Oakwell Stadium in Barnsley. The two struck out in the first round, then McKenna began to apply the pressure, losing Laws three more times and maintaining his undefeated record after a third-round stoppage.

English cruiserweight champion Viddal Riley (11-0, 6 KO) returns to action from a rib injury that has kept him out of the ring since a career-best victory over Mikael Lawal in March. Riley will be looking to shake off the ring rust as he takes on high-profile opponents in the recent year.

Undefeated Chorley super middleweight Mark Jeffers (18-0, 5 KO) scored an explosive fifth-round knockout victory over Darren Johnston in May and will be looking to bring more drama to Liverpool’s Exhibition Center as he goes in search of his 19th professional win.

Mason Cartwright (20-4-1, 8 KO) from Cheshire, a former two-time British title challenger from Ellesmere Port, will be counting on local support as he returns to the title track.

After signing a promotional contract with BOXXER, local star Frankie Stringer (8-0, 1 KO) can achieve his third victory in 2024, when he returns in front of his fans in Liverpool. The 23-year-old lightweight fighter is a player of the notable city team Rotunda ABC, and his manager is former world champion Liam Smith.

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Heavyweight who knocked out Lewis to break Tyson’s record days after the feat

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Heavyweight Oliver McCall returns 2024

Mike Tyson will miss his final record-breaking days after becoming the oldest former heavyweight champion to walk through the ring.

“The Baddest Man on the Planet” reached an all-time high in Texas on Friday night, returning from a two-decade absence. However, Tyson gave the achievement five days later to former Lennox Lewis conqueror Oliver McCall.

On Tuesday night at The Troubadour in Nashville, Tennessee, the former WBC heavyweight champion returns to action and will face veteran Stacy Frazier in a fight scheduled for four rounds. At age 59, McCall will set the record for a sanctioned fight, beating Tyson by fourteen months.

McCall was born in April 1965, and Tyson’s mother gave birth to him in June 1966. “The Atomic Bull” hopes to score his 60th career victory tonight. He enters the fight with a record of 59-14, including 38 knockouts.

The Chicago native believes his continued activity over the last 19 years will be what separates his performance on Tuesday night from what Tyson looked like on Friday.

“I’m ready. I’ve been training here in Nashville for a few weeks now, but I’m always in shape,” McCall said. “It will be a completely different match than what the fans saw on Friday.

“I think being lively has a lot to do with it. I haven’t fought in five years because of the pandemic and a few things that didn’t work out.

“If you look at my record, since 2005 I have fought 25 times, of which I have won 19-6 times against quality fighters and won various regional titles.

McCall fights without financial motivation. He sees his fighting days approaching and is already planning his post-retirement plans.

“I want to do this for another year. This means I will be 40 years into my career as a professional boxer. Then I want to train and become a manager. I want to return the favor and assist the next generation of players try to become world champions.

“I came here to Nashville and contacted the manager who took me to the title [Country Box] promoter Jimmy Adams. I’m learning a lot about this aspect of the sport. I love the players here and everything that happens with Country Box.”

The Country Box 25 gala will also feature eight-round fights between super bantamweight Elon DeJesus (8-1-2, 7 KO) and Dominique Griffin (5-7-2, 2 KO), as well as super middleweight fighters. Sean Hemphill (16-2, 10 KO) fights Bryant McClain (6-5-2, 1 KO).

Airy heavyweight Isaac Carbonell (8-0, 5 KO) will face Antonio Louis Hernandez (7-19-4, 4 KO) in six-round fights; Joel Mutombo (6-0, 4 KO) vs. Kevin Torian (3-2, 3 KO) in a cruiserweight fight.

In a four-round fight, Ryan Zempoaltecatl (2-0, 1 KO) will face Raymond Chacon (10-64-1, 2 KO).

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