
Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion
The stakes couldn't have been clearer for Zayas, a prodigy who turned professional at 17 and has since made a measured ascent through the ranks. With the victory before a rollicking crowd of several thousand at the Theater at Madison Square Garden, Zayas made good on years of promise while penning another chapter into the storied Puerto Rico–Mexico rivalry.
The bout was not the formality that some had envisioned. The wiry Garcia, an awkward and unpredictable foe, disrupted Zayas's rhythm early with lunging attacks and roughhouse tactics. But the younger man's superior timing, footwork and hand speed gradually took over. Zayas began beating Garcia to the punch with sharp counters and crisp combinations, breaking him down to the body and head while staying in control against the erratic threat in front of him.
There were few moments of real jeopardy, but Garcia made him work for every round. He buzzed Zayas with a flush left hook in the third and rallied late with a flurry in the 10th, but each time Zayas responded with composure. In the end, the ringside judges scored it 119-109, 118-110 and 116-112 in his favor. (The Guardian had it 117-111.)
'That's what it's all about: growth,' an elated Zayas said afterward. 'You guys have seen me since I was 16 years old. You've seen the elevation in my game. Today wasn't the exception. He came to fight. We knew he was coming to fight. We needed to keep him at distance and that's what we did. We frustrated him.'
Garcia (33-5, 26 KOs), who earned his shot with an upset of Charles Conwell by 12-round split decision in April, proved durable and determined but lacked the tools to solve Zayas's blend of poise, precision and ringcraft. He landed 130 of 603 punches (21.6%), according to Compubox's punch statistics, compared to 199 of 522 for his opponent (38.1%).
For Zayas (22-0, 14 KOs), the win completed a journey that began more than 15 years ago in a San Juan boxing gym, where his mother brought him to learn how to defend himself from bullies. Within months, he was a local sensation. At 10, he'd already declared his professional ambitions. That path accelerated after his family moved to Sunrise, Florida, where he came under the tutelage of trainer Javiel Centeno, a mentee of the great Angelo Dundee.
'My mom is my hero,' Zayas said. 'She made it happen. All this is because of her. She never quit on me. She always told me I was going to be a world champion and she made everything happen, everything possible. We moved out of Puerto Rico to chase that dream and it's finally here at 22.'
Zayas grew up studying the Puerto Rican fistic icons – Tito Trinidad, Macho Camacho, Wilfredo Benitez – and idolized Miguel Cotto, whose fights became family rituals. That legacy was always his north star. On Saturday, it came full circle: in the same city where Cotto had his greatest nights, against a Mexican flag-bearer, Zayas became Puerto Rico's next great hope.
The belt he won Saturday may be just the beginning. At 22, Zayas has time, talent and a devoted fanbase on his side. The 154lb division is stacked with challenges and unification opportunities, the kind of fights that will reveal how high he can climb. 'Anybody in the division can get it now,' Zayas said. 'There's no running. I'm a world champion, and I have what they want.'
Zayas was long seen by many as a polished, likable prospect, but questions remain as the first chapter of his career comes to a close. Does he have the power to hurt the division's elite? Is he pound-for-pound material or a well-managed belt-holder who might fall short at the highest level? Saturday wasn't the night for those answers. Instead it was the night a 22-year-old from San Juan by way of Sunrise fulfilled a lifelong dream and made his first mark on Puerto Rican boxing's ocean-deep lore.
'That's my new baby,' Zayas said, giving his bejeweled trophy a gentle squeeze early Sunday morning. 'I'm sleeping with it tonight. Might sleep with it the whole week. It feels amazing. I worked hard for this. Almost 20 years as a boxer, six as a professional. The hard work finally paid off. I told everybody I was made for this. This was my moment. And we made it happen.'
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