logo
Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion

Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion

The Guardian27-07-2025
Xander Zayas's coronation is complete. The 22-year-old who has long been put forth as Puerto Rico's next boxing star became the sport's youngest active world champion on Saturday night, defeating Mexico's Jorge Garcia Perez by a comfortable 12-round unanimous decision to claim the vacant WBO junior middleweight title.
The stakes couldn't have been clearer for Zayas, a prodigy who turned professional at 17 and has since plotted a measured ascent through the ranks. With the clear-cut 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. The most frenetic two-way action broke out in the sixth with both men trading hellfire in the center of the ring and Zayas getting the better of the exchanges.
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 discipline and 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 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, [made] 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 a gentle caress to the bejeweled trophy draped over his shoulder 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.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Khamzat Chimaev shuts down rumour around Dricus Du Plessis title fight at UFC 319
Khamzat Chimaev shuts down rumour around Dricus Du Plessis title fight at UFC 319

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Khamzat Chimaev shuts down rumour around Dricus Du Plessis title fight at UFC 319

Khamzat Chimaev has dismissed a rumour that he could retire if he wins the middleweight title at UFC 319 this month. On 16 August, Chimaev will challenge champion Dricus Du Plessis in Chicago, as one of the UFC's most fearsome contenders finally gets a title shot after being slowed by injury and illness. With those setbacks in mind, back-up fighter Caio Borralho said in July that 'whispers' suggest Chimaev will call time on his career if he wins the gold. However, Chimaev has moved to dismiss that speculation, telling ESPN on Wednesday (6 August): 'Yeah, I've seen Caio said... I don't know where he hears those things. 'I need money, bro! This is not enough, just to go for the one title. 'Hopefully if I don't get injured or some stuff, I'm gonna defend the belt or fight for another belt in Abu Dhabi as well.' Chimaev, 31, has struggled with injuries and illness during his five-year UFC tenure, but when he has competed, he has been near-perfect. The Russian is 14-0 as a professional, 8-0 in the UFC, and holds wins over former champions Kamaru Usman and Robert Whittaker – the latter of whom he submitted in round one in October, crushing Whittaker's teeth in the process. Previously, there were rumours that Chimaev could not travel to the US, with the Russian having last competed stateside in 2022 and having fought in Abu Dhabi in his two bouts since then. However, he will return to US soil for UFC 319, where he faces Du Plessis in the main event. If Du Plessis or Chimaev falls out of the fight on short notice, though, Borralho will step in. The Brazilian, 32, alluded to a potential Chimaev retirement in July, telling MMA Today: 'I heard, somewhere, some people saying that if he wins the belt, he is gonna retire. 'Some little talks, some whispers, you know? If he wins the belt, he retires. I'm not sure of that, I don't know if I believe that or not, but it's an option. 'There's too much pressure on him. [He's had] health problems and a lot of pressure from his country. Maybe he retires, maybe not. 'He has a lot of money already, like a lot of money. He's good with money. He'd already be the champion [in this case], so why not retire? I'd do the same.' While Chimaev has been a scary force inside the Octagon, Du Plessis has been formidable. The South African, 31, has an overall record of 23-2 and is 9-0 in the UFC – with two title defences under his belt. Du Plessis won the middleweight title in January 2024 with a decision win over Sean Strickland, and he replicated that result to retain the strap this February. In between those fights, he submitted former champion Israel Adesanya in another successful title defence. Like Chimaev, 'Stillknocks' also holds a win over Whittaker, having scored a TKO of the ex-champion in 2023.

Conor Benn's coach makes bold claim about Chris Eubank Jr rematch
Conor Benn's coach makes bold claim about Chris Eubank Jr rematch

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Conor Benn's coach makes bold claim about Chris Eubank Jr rematch

Conor Benn 's coach Tony Sims has said he thinks November's rematch with Chris Eubank Jr could be 'even bigger' than their seismic grudge match in April. Eubank Jr won the first fight between the British rivals, outpointing Benn at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in a thrilling contest, and the pair will return to that venue on 15 November. 'We've been waiting for the date and the venue, and it's come through this morning, and as you say: it's a massive fight,' Sims told Boxing Social on Wednesday (6 August). 'The first fight was enormous, and I think this fight's gonna be even bigger. After watching the first fight – if you're a fan, that is – everyone's saying it's the most exciting fight they've ever watched. 'So, I think it'll get a lot more people wanting to tune into that [second] fight. And obviously we're gonna win the next fight, but looking forward to it – looking forward to getting Conor Benn ready to fight. It's gonna be historic.' Benn, 28, will look to avenge the sole loss of his professional career when he faces Eubank Jr, 35, again, and the current expectation is that the bout will take place at 160lb – like their first meeting. That dynamic saw Benn move up two weights from his preferred division of welterweight, while Eubank Jr has fought at super-middleweight in recent years but returned to middleweight to face Benn. Eubank Jr in fact missed weight by 0.5lb and was fined £375,000, though he successfully made the rehydration weight of 170lb. 'Conor Benn moved up two weights to do that fight, which is a phenomenal thing to do in the first place, especially against a world-ranked middleweight,' Sims added. 'He stepped up, and he hadn't boxed for nearly a year-and-a-half as well. He's had the fight now, so the rust is well and truly off, and he's fought Chris already, so he knows what he's like at middleweight. He'll be feeling confident going into the second fight. 'I feel like there's a lot more in Conor Benn to come out yet. I've seen it obviously in the gym and in sparring, and I believe this fight, we'll see a better fighter in Conor Benn this time. 'I believe that he'll do the adjustments that he needs to do in the gym, and I believe that he'll bring them adjustments into the fight.' The first bout was surrounded by familial drama, not only taking place more than 30 years after Benn and Eubank Jr's fathers – Nigel Benn and Eubank Sr – fought each other for the second and final time, but with Eubank Sr's presence on the night proving a complete shock. Eubank Sr had criticised the match-up due to the weight disparity, and even claimed in the days before the fight that it would not go ahead. However, in a dramatic scene shown on the big screens at Tottenham, he emerged from a car with Eubank Jr on fight night. He then willed on his son from ringside, as Nigel Benn did to his own son. Eubank Jr and Benn were initially due to square off in October 2022, but the bout was cancelled on two days' notice upon the revelation that Benn had failed two pre-fight drug tests. A controversial saga ensued, with Benn ultimately cleared to box in Britain late last year, having fought twice in the US in the meantime.

Oleksandr Usyk's three-man shortlist for final fight includes Jake Paul and familiar foe
Oleksandr Usyk's three-man shortlist for final fight includes Jake Paul and familiar foe

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Oleksandr Usyk's three-man shortlist for final fight includes Jake Paul and familiar foe

Usyk revealed earlier this year that he has two more fights in him before calling it a day - and it appears as if the Ukrainian has a stacked hit-list ahead of his final outing Oleksandr Usyk has a stunning three-man hit-list - which includes Jake Paul - ahead of his final fight. ‌ Earlier this year, the Ukrainian had revealed he has two more fights in him before officially calling it a day. Last month, Usyk would go on to become a two-time undisputed heavyweight champion after brutally knocking out Daniel Dubois in front of 90,000 fans at Wembley Stadium. ‌ Ahead of his final fight, it would appear that several names are in the run-in, and the Ukrainian could even switch sports. Since moving up to heavyweight, Usyk has defeated Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury and Dubois twice. Despite clearing out the top dogs in boxing's heaviest division, it would appear that a third fight with Fury could very well be on the cards. ‌ According to 112 Ukraine, Fury is still in consideration for a trilogy fight. The pair first went head-to-head back in May 2024 - with Usyk going on to win the undisputed heavyweight title for the first time after scoring a split decision victory. Seven months later, the two stars traded leather for a second time. Once again, the Ukrainian emerged triumphant after another points win over the 'Gypsy King.' Just weeks after the second defeat, Fury retired from the sport, only to announce his return several months later. While Fury later backtracked on his comeback plans, a third fight with the Ukrainian would be enough to officially lure him out of retirement. Another name on the the 38-year-old's list is heavyweight sensation, Joseph Parker. Usyk has been ordered by the WBO to defend his belt against the Kiwi next - or else vacate the gold strap. Parker's team claimed that no talks have taken place as of yet. The final name on the stacked list is Paul. Both Usyk and Paul faced off in the ring after the former's win over Dubois last month - hinting at a potential showdown between the pair. Rumours of a fight quickly began to circulate, but not in the boxing ring, but in the octagon. Usyk's team have welcomed a potential showdown with the 28-year-old. Director of Team Usyk Sergey Lapin, recently revealed talks are underway for Usyk to face Paul in the MMA cage as early as the start of 2026. Speaking to Plejmo, Lapin said: "The team is currently working on the next fight. We're looking at a few options, focusing on those who make sense both sport-wise and in terms of audience interest and status. "Almost every fighter has called out Jake Paul. But our story is different. For us it's about MMA, something non-standard, and that's where its power lies. We're not talking about a boxing match with Oleksandr Usyk, no disrespect to Jake, but in MMA the chances are more even. Jake has some experience, while Oleksandr would have to adapt quickly. This could become a massive show with a huge global audience. Talks are already underway, and if everything lines up, the fight could happen early next year." When is Oleksandr Usyk's next fight? It appears Usyk will take a well-deserved break for the remainder of the year to relax and enjoy precious moments with his family before considering his next move in the squared circle. Following his victory over Dubois, the Ukrainian champion reflected on his age, declaring: "38 is a young guy, remember! 38 is only the start! "I want to say thank you to Jesus Christ. I want to say thank you to my team and Wembley, thank you so much! It's for the people. Nothing is next. It's enough, next, I don't know. I want to rest. My family, my wife, my children, I want to rest now. Two or three months, I want to just rest." He continued: "Maybe it's Tyson Fury," Usyk added. "Maybe we have three choices, Derek Chisora and Anthony Joshua. Maybe Joseph Parker. Listen, I cannot now say because I want to go back home."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store