10/30 ESPN+: Jose Zepeda vs Josue Vargas

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Jose “Chon” Zepeda wants a third world title shot. Josue “The Prodigy” Vargas, born in Puerto Rico and raised in the Bronx, hopes his hometown main event is the ticket to title contention.


Zepeda and Vargas will meet in a 10-round junior welterweight main event Saturday, Oct. 30 at Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden. Zepeda is ranked No. 2 in the world by the WBC, and Vargas, winner of 13 straight bouts, hopes to knock “Chon” off his lofty perch.

Zepeda-Vargas and a 10-round bantamweight tilt between undefeated Puerto Rican knockout artist Carlos “Purin” Caraballo and former world title challenger Jonas Sultan will stream and live and exclusively on ESPN+ starting at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT.

Undercard action — also streaming and live and exclusively on ESPN+ — includes former world champion Jonathan Guzman returning in an eight-round junior featherweight fight, Long Island-born welterweight Jahi Tucker (4-0, 2 KOs) in a six-rounder, Kasir “Mazzi” Goldston (3-0, 1 KO) competing in a six-round junior welterweight contest, New York City prospect Mathew Gonzalez (12-0, 8 KOs) making his MSG debut in a six-rounder at junior welterweight, former New York City amateur standout Ray Cuadrado (1-0, 1 KO) in a four-rounder at junior lightweight, and Irish sensation Paddy “Real Deal” Donovan (7-0, 5 KOs) making his American debut in a six-round welterweight assignment.


Promoted by Top Rank, tickets starting at $30 (not including fees) go on sale Friday, Oct. 1 at 12 p.m. ET and can be purchased by visiting Ticketmaster.com or MSG.com. All guests age 12 and older are required to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination (this means having at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine prior to attending). MSG’s comprehensive COVID-19 guidelines, including those regarding children under 12, can be found at Madison Square Garden FAQs | MSG | Official Site.


“It’s been a long time, and Top Rank and ESPN are thrilled to be back at Madison Square Garden with an intriguing battle between a sensational young southpaw in Vargas and a world-level contender in Zepeda. The winner is squarely in the title picture,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “Carlos Caraballo has all the makings of the next Puerto Rican superstar. Not many bantamweights can punch like this kid, but Sultan is far from a pushover.”

Zepeda (34-2, 21 KOs) is unbeaten in five bouts since a tight majority decision loss to then-WBC world champion Jose Ramirez in February 2019. The slick-boxing Zepeda participated in the 2020 Fight of the Year, knocking out Ivan Baranchyk in the fifth round of a bout that featured eight total knockdowns. He returned in May on the Josh Taylor-Ramirez undercard and outboxed “Hammerin” Hank Lundy over 10 rounds. Zepeda hopes a win over Vargas leads to a Ramirez rematch or perhaps a crack at undisputed king Taylor. Vargas (19-1, 9 KOs) earned his nickname as a wunderkind in the Bronx, where he compiled a 72-8 amateur record and won six New York City Metro championships. Apart from a controversial disqualification loss early in his pro career, Vargas has been near-perfect. He fought twice in 2020 inside the MGM Grand Bubble, notching wide points wins over Salvador Briceno and Kendo Castaneda. He last fought April 24 in Kissimmee, Florida, and turned back the awkward challenge of Willie Shaw over 10 rounds.


“I am pushing hard to earn another world title opportunity, but I understand the task at hand against a young, talented fighter like Josue Vargas,” Zepeda said. “There is mutual respect, but when we enter the Madison Square Garden ring, that all goes out the window.”

Vargas said, “I’m ready for this opportunity. Being the main event in my hometown, Madison Square Garden, is a dream true. The Bronx and Puerto Rico will be in the building to show their support. This is Puerto Rico versus Mexico, so you know it’s going to be a heck of a fight. Once I got the call, I started pushing even harder. I‘ve been through a lot in my professional career, so why not step up to the plate? I have the skills to beat Zepeda, and I’m going to do just that. Zepeda has a lot of experience against the top names in the junior welterweight division. We both have the talent and the skills to put on a show.”

Caraballo (14-0, 14 KOs), from Guayanilla, Puerto Rico, is a five-year pro who broke out in March with his fourth-round demolition over Leonardo Baez. He hopes to enter the world title picture with an impressive showing over Sultan (17-5, 11 KOs), a former world title challenger from the Philippines who has never been stopped as a professional. In May 2018, Sultan dropped a decision to Jerwin Ancajas for the IBF junior bantamweight world title. He has won three out of his past four fights and last fought in August, knocking out Sharone Carter in seven rounds.

Caraballo said, “I am thankful for the opportunity that my promoter, Miguel Cotto Promotions, is giving me together with Top Rank to fight at Madison Square Garden. I will take this opportunity to look great and continue to make noise at 118 pounds as I aspire to win a world title. Sultan is a strong, experienced opponent. I know he has fought the big names, but I am working hard with my team to show I am a force to be reckoned with. This victory is for my people from Guayanilla, and all Puerto Ricans in New York.”
 

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hahah shyt popped off at the weigh in

ricans and mexicans...god bless em




All participants did their job at the scale for Top Rank’s first show in New York City since the pandemic, though the first fight nearly came a day ahead of schedule.

Headlining the show, former title challenger Jose Zepeda faces streaking prospect Josue Vargas in a scheduled ten-round contest. Both boxers were well under the junior welterweight limit for Saturday’s main event, which airs live on ESPN+ from Madison Square Garden’s Hulu Theater in New York City.

Zepeda weighed 139.4 pounds, putting to rest any concerns of his being weight-drained and having outgrown the division. Vargas checked in at a fit-and-trim 139 pounds. The ease of making weight was the last bit of professionalism exuded by either side, as the obligatory staredown following the weigh-in devolved into a brief brawl between camps before the situation was resolved.

Zepeda (34-2, 26KOs) Is more than a year removed from his epic brawl with former titlist Ivan Baranchyk. The universally hailed 2020 Fight of the Year saw both fighters knocked down four times each, but with Zepeda having the final say as a left hand put Baranchyk down and out for good in their unforgettable October 2020 classic at a crowdless MGM Grand Conference Center in Las Vegas.

The subsequent and most recent ring appearance for California’s Zepeda came in front of a crowd, though to considerably less fanfare in a ten-round decision over veteran Hank Lundy. The May 22 bout at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas saw Zepeda struggle to the point where it was strongly rumored that a move to welterweight was in the cards.

That day has not yet arrived, as the former title challenger remains at junior welterweight in pursuit of a second title shot. His lone effort resulted in a heartbreaking twelve-round, majority decision defeat to then-unbeaten WBC titlist Jose Ramirez in February 2019, having fought to a No-Contest three months later. Zepeda then managed a convincing ten-round win over former two-division titlist Jose Pedraza to begin his current four-fight win streak.

Vargas (19-1, 9KOs) returns to New York City for the first time since the pandemic. The Bronx-based Boricua—originally from Aguadilla, Puerto Rico—has fought twice in the MGM Grand bubble before playing to raucous cheers in his most recent bout, a ten-round win over Willie Shaw this past April at Silver Spurs Arena in Kissimmee, Florida—a heavily Puerto Rican-populated region.

A similar reaction should come of his return to MSG property, having last appeared in a December 2019 points win over Noel Murphy.

Saturday’s bout will mark the first for Vargas as a televised headliner. The 23-year-old southpaw has won 13 in a row since a fluke disqualification loss in his seventh pro bout.

The chief support carries a similar theme, as a rising Puerto Rican prospect faces a battle tested former title challenger.

Carlos Caraballo (14-0, 14KOs) and Jonas Sultan (17-5, 11KOs) both made weight for their intriguing ten-round bantamweight crossroads bout. Caraballo hit the scale at a ripped 117.6 pounds for just his fourth pro fight outside of his native Puerto Rico and first on the East Coast. Sultan also weighed a rock solid 117.6 pounds as he fights for the second time in just eleven weeks.

Caraballo has emerged as one of the sport’s hottest prospects, aided by his perfect knockout-to-win ratio as a pro. The 25-year-old bantamweight—who is now co-promoted by Top Rank along with his career-long affiliation with Promociones Miguel Cotto—has yet to fight beyond the sixth round, barely losing a round along the way. Caraballo has scored early wins in two straight fights in the greater San Juan area, including a fourth-round knockout of Leonardo Baez this past March in Old San Juan.

Sultan is coming off of a seventh-round knockout win over Sharone Carter this past August 14 at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California. The bout came on the undercard of countryman and reigning WBO bantamweight titlist John Riel Casimero, against whom Sultan owns a September 2017 non-title win.

The victory in August was the third in the past four fights for Sultan following a May 2018 points loss to countryman and long-reigning IBF junior bantamweight Jerwin Ancajas.

Below are the weights for the rest of the undercard:

Jonathan Guzman (24-1, 23KOs), Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 123 pounds vs. Carlos Jackson (17-1, 11KOs), Atlanta, 123 pounds—8 rds., junior featherweight

Mathew Gonzalez (12-0, 8KOs), Ridgewood, New York, 143 pounds vs. Dakota Linger (12-5-2, 8KOs), Buckhannon, West Virginia, 141.8 pounds—6 rds, junior welterweight

Pablo Valdez (4-0, 4KOs), New York City, 148.4 pounds vs. Alejandro Martinez (2-1-1, 2KOs), Montebello, California, 148.6 pounds—6 rounds, welterweight

Jahi Tucker (4-0, 2KOs), Deer Park, New York, 147.6 pounds vs. Jorge Rodrigo Sosa (3-2, 3KOs), Asuncion, Paraguay, 145.2 pounds—6 rds, welterweight

Raymond Cuadrado (1-0, 1KO), Ridgewood, New York, 129.6 pounds vs. Michael Land (1-3-1, 1KO), Dallas, 129.4 pounds—4 rds., junior lightweight

Kasir Goldston (3-0, 1KO), Albany, New York, 142 pounds vs. Marc Misiura (2-1, 1KO), Scranton, Pennsylvania, 142.2 pounds—4 rds, junior welterweight
 
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i guess thats how Vargas wants to make a name for himself

dude couldn’t do shyt at 135 and definitely not at 140

Zepeda by KO
 
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