Diego De La Hoya made it look easy, continuing his climb into the contending ranks for a 122-pound title with a blowout score victory Saturday over Randy Caballero on the Canelo-Golovkin undercard at T-Mobile Arena.
De La Hoya (20-0, 9 KOs), of Mexico, employed quick feet and quicker hands for a dance that made Caballero (24-1, 14 KOs), of Coachella, Calif., look awkward. The decision was unanimous. But that doesn’t explain just how one-sided it was, especially in bout between fighters unbeaten before opening bell.
The decision was split. The boos were unanimous.
Lightweight prospect Ryan Martin got both Saturday night in an unpopular, 10-round decision over Francisco Rojo of Mexico City on the Canelo-Golovkin undercard at T-Mobile Arena.
Martin (20-0, 11 KOs), of Chattanooga, had an advantage in reach and hand speed, but he could never get a clear cut advantage over the aggressive Rojo (19-3,12 KOs), who was favored 98-91 on one scorecard. Martin, penalized a point for a head butt in the ninth, won on the other two cards, 96-93 and 95-94.
Vergil Ortiz keeps it perfect with second-round TKO
Dallas super-lightweight Vergil Ortiz (7-0, 7 KOs) made it look easy, improving on a perfect record with a succession of body punches that left Cesar Valenzuela (7-2, 2 KOs) of Phoenix on all fours, exhausted and finished in a second round TKO in the second bout on the non-televised part of the Canelo-Golovkin card.
Bohachuk goes to 5-0 with TKO win
Super-welterweight prospect Serhil Bohachuk (5-0, 5 KOs) needed only a hook. It landed in the second round, staggering overmatched Joan Valenzuela 5-9-1, 5 KOs),a Chula Vista, Calif., fighter who sought some refuge along the ropes, but only ran into more punches before it was stopped midway through the round.
Marlen Esparza opens the show with dominant decision
The arena was empty. But the ring wasn’t.
Flyweight Marlen Esperza was there, full of heart and skill, to open the show Saturday a couple of hours before the pay-per-view telecast of the long-awaited card featuring the middleweight showdown between Gennady Golvkin and Canelo Alvarez at T-Mobile Arena,
Esperza (3-0) who dedicated the fight to the flood-ravaged victims in her hometown of Houston, looked dominated every second of every round for a six-round shutout of Aracely Palacios (8-8, 1 KO) of Mexico.
“Even though my opponent, on paper, looked like she had more ring experience, I’ve been in the ring way more than she had,’’ said Esparza, a 2012 Olympic bronze medalist. “Because I had three-minute rounds, I was able to think a lot more in the ring and was even told by my trainer I had to slow down.
“I couldn’t research much about my opponent, but we knew she was going to be throwing her right often. I’m satisfied with my performance because this was my first six-round fight.”