7/17 PBC on SHO: Jermell Charlo vs Brian Castaño (WBC/WBA/IBF/WBO Super Welterweight Titles)

Who Wins?


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patscorpio

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Unified WBC, WBA, and IBF World Champion Jermell Charlo and WBO World Champion Brian Castaño will battle for undisputed status at super welterweight as all four 154-pound belts hang in the balance for the first time in history on Saturday, July 17 live on SHOWTIME from AT&T Center in San Antonio in a Premier Boxing Champions event.



SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING begins at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT and will also feature unbeaten Interim WBA Lightweight Champion Rolando “Rolly” Romero taking on Austin Dulay in the co-main event, plus unbeaten middleweight Amilcar Vidal matching up against veteran contender Immanuwel Aleem in a 10-round bout that opens the telecast.

Tickets for the live event, which is promoted by Lions Only Promotions and TGB Promotions, are on sale now and can be purchased through www.attcenter.com. Romero vs. Dulay is co-promoted with Mayweather Promotions.

“This is going to be a monumental and historic event on July 17 at AT&T Center in San Antonio,” said Tom Brown, President of TGB Promotions. “Charlo and Castaño will be vying to become the first undisputed champion at 154-pounds in the four-belt era.
This is a big moment for the sport and I’m expecting both fighters to do whatever it takes to accomplish something that’s never been done before. Whoever emerges victorious on July 17, will cement their legacy and become the undisputed top fighter in one of the most stacked divisions in all of boxing.”



After years of scintillating matchups, memorable showdowns, and drama-filled bouts, the super welterweight division will crown an undisputed champion on July 17 when the unified champion Charlo puts his three titles on the line against the hard-charging world champion Castaño. The winner of this matchup will become the first four-belt champion of the 154-pound division.


Houston’s Charlo (34-1, 18 KOs) became a unified champion in his last fight, dropping Jeison Rosario three times on his way to an eighth-round knockout that earned him the WBA and IBF titles.


Before that fight, Charlo had avenged the only loss of his career, as he reclaimed his WBC belt via an 11th-round knockout of Tony Harrison in one of 2019’s best fights.

The 31-year-old is trained by Derrick James in Dallas and won his first world title in his debut fight with James by scoring an eighth-round knockout of John Jackson in 2016. He followed up that victory with three successful defenses, knocking out Erickson Lubin and Charles Hatley, while winning a decision over former world champion Austin Trout.
“I’m more than excited for July 17,” said Charlo. “I have so much potential and I’m just doing everything I can to get better and do better day by day.

I’m hungrier than ever because I know I’m on the verge of capturing this undisputed title and doing something that nobody has ever done before at 154 pounds.

There’s nobody out there that’s as fast, strong and elusive as me. Castaño doesn’t possess anything I haven’t seen before, and we’ll see if he can take my power and the pain I’ll bring.

But there’s nothing that worries me about this fight. I’m training super hard and aggressive and just taking it one day at a time. I’m so ready for this and more than likely he’ll walk into every shot I throw.”

The 31-year-old Castaño (17-0-1, 12 KOs) put on a spectacular performance to capture the WBO title in February, as he dominated Patrick Teixeira to wrest the belt away via unanimous decision.
A native of Buenos Aires, Argentina, a win on July 17 would be a monumental achievement in the storied history of Argentine boxing.

Prior to winning his title, Castaño fought to a draw against two-division world champion Erislandy Lara in a 2019 action fight, and also owns triumphs over Michel Soro, Cedric Vitu, and Wale Omotoso.

A highly experienced amateur, Castaño notched victories over unified welterweight champion Errol Spence Jr. and top middleweight Sergiy Derevyanchenko before he turned pro.

“This is the biggest opportunity of my life and I won’t let it get away,” said Castaño. “I’ll make Charlo suffer more than he ever thought was possible. I’m training with only one goal in mind, to leave the ring with all of the belts on July 17.”

Undercard

A rising prospect in the Mayweather Promotions’ stable, Romero (13-0, 11 KOs) won his interim title in August 2020 via unanimous decision over then unbeaten Jackson Marinez.


The 25-year-old followed that victory up with an impressive seventh-round TKO over Avery Sparrow in January. Representing his hometown of Las Vegas, the undefeated Romero began his pro career with knockouts in 10 of his first 11 fights.

“I’ve watched some clips of Dulay fighting, and he definitely isn’t going to want to get hit by my power,” said Romero. “My trainer Bullit Cromwell and my dad are always by my side in camp, so we haven’t been working on doing too many things differently, we’re just fine-tuning.

People said that all I have is power, so in my last fight I carried Sparrow the entire fight so I could show a different side. But for this fight, I don’t think I’m going to need to do that.”

Dulay (14-2, 10 KOs) enters this fight the winner of three out of his last four bouts, as he seeks a career-best triumph over Romero on July 17.

The 25-year-old most recently defeated Jose Gallegos by unanimous decision in November 2020, putting him back in the win column after a decision loss against former title challenger Diego Magdaleno.

Fighting out of his hometown of Nashville, Tennessee, Dulay’s only other pro loss came against unbeaten rising interim super featherweight champion Chris Colbert.

“I moved my whole camp to Atlanta to focus mentally and to prepare physically for this fight,” said Dulay. “I’m bringing everything I got for this opportunity. But honestly, my training began over 20 years for this. It’s my time!”

Born in Montevideo, Uruguay, Vidal (12-0, 11 KOs) now fights out of Coachella, California, having beaten previously undefeated fighters in his last three bouts.

The 25-year-old made his U.S. debut with a stoppage of Zach Prieto in November 2019, then returned quickly to knock out Leopoldo Reyna in January 2020. Most recently, the undefeated middleweight stopped Edward Ortiz in the second round of their November 2020 clash.

“Training has been going great for July 17,” said Vidal. “This is the best camp of my life. I will be stronger and hit harder than ever before, which is not good news for Immanuwel Aleem. The fans should watch this fight because I have a spectacular knockout to show them.

My opponent has excellent experience and is a very good fighter, but I have full confidence in my punching power and my ability to beat him.

This is another great opportunity for me. I grew up dreaming of doing exactly this in the ring, fighting in America against great opponents who will test me. This is a chance to be one step closer to reaching my goal of becoming a world champion from Uruguay and I will make the most of it.”

The 27-year-old Aleem (18-2-2, 11 KO) has been sparring with WBC Middleweight World Champion Jermall Charlo as he prepares to make his return to the ring.

Born in East Meadow, New York, and now residing in Richmond, Virginia, Aleem will look to bounce back from a draw against Matt Korobov and a majority decision loss against Ronald Ellis in his last two fights.

Unbeaten in his first 18 pro bouts, Aleem owns an impressive stoppage victory over then unbeaten Ievgen Khytrov in their memorable 2017 brawl.

“I’m excited to take advantage of this opportunity on July 17,” said Aleem. “Vidal has an undefeated record, so I know he’s going to come in with confidence, which should make this a great fight.

I can’t wait to show off everything I’ve been working on. You’re going to see the very best version of myself in this fight and I’m going to do whatever it takes to have my hand raised.”​
 

Dallas' 4 Eva

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I will be attending this fight live so I won't be posting in this thread fight night so I'm gonna give my assessment of this fight and pick now.

This is a great fight, honestly it is also a 50-50 fight. Make no mistake about it, Brian Castano is a good fighter. He should have a win over Lara on his resume they called it a draw, but you know... boxing. However it turned out to be a blessing, because of that he was able to become WBO mandatory where he handled Teixeira who has a legit win over an unbeaten fighter for the belt in Adames. Brian Castano is a classic come forward pressure fighter who has good accumulation power, he has a little bit if a back foot though he is all around a good fighter. He has an excellent amatuer pedigree with wins over Errol Spence Jr. and Sergey Derevyanchenko, one is a victory against Pacquiao away from being a great fighter at a lower weight, the other is a solid good proven tough fighter at a higher weight.

Castano is only 5'7" but he is built like a tank and he has an incredible gas tank on top of it. He threw almost 1300 punches in his last fight, if he didn't go over it. I also have NO REASON AT ALL to doubt his chin. In the fights I have seen from him I have never seen him visibily hurt by anyone. This is a tough fight, Castano honesty has a style somewhat similar to Chavez Sr. He mauled Teixeira, straight beat the dude up bruh. Castano can fight. Remember what I said about Spence and he can be beat just not by who people think can beat him. Spence will be at 154 one day, I'm looking forward to seeing their rematch and see if he can avenge his amatuer loss, because Castano definitely still has the ability to beat Spence from what I see.

Jermell definitely is the more explosive puncher of the two. 7 of his last 8 victories have been by KO, and the one who went the distance was still knocked down clean twice, and while people say his boxing struggles I have slowly watched Jermell's boxing improve over this stretch of time actually. Jermell does have a loss, controversial, but respect the game it's an L, which he avenged by KO. He switched trainers to Derrick James around the time this streak started, James taught him how to punch. I don't know what he taught him, but Charlo's power has been nothing short of incredible, but his KO's are always perfectly timed and exploiting and opening a chink in the armor. He timed Rosario's movements and knew exactly when he would be in that spot. He knew Lubin liked to dip and caught him square on the jaw as he did it. His boxing and adjusting to his new style of fighting has been great to watch as a fan of boxing. When Jermell was under, I believe Ronnie Shields the same trainer Jermall has, he had a much more methodical approach to boxing and honestly wasn't a very exciting fighter, but he always had boxing skills, granted he is no longer a boxer-puncher, but a puncher-boxer now under James.

I also have NO REASON AT ALL TO DOUBT JERMELL'S CHIN EITHER. The man has been in the ring with legit punchers and held up just fine. I look at the styles in which these fighters fight with, and I find it very hard to see this going the distance. Both fighters are always looking for the KO, they do not fight for decisions whether it ends in one or not, and neither has any quit in them, one way or another this fight is probably ending in a stoppage. The keys to victory for Jermell is to use lateral movement and pump his jab until Castano leaves himself open because he does leave himself open because he can get wild at times, he is a rough fighter. Castano needs to never stop coming forward, and have a consistent body attack. Jermell can feast in the middle of the ring, but Castano can beat him down against the ropes.

I am going to pick Jermell Charlo, by left hook KO catching Castano coming in, in the 9th or 10th round. I say this saying Jermell should only have a slight edge over Castano because he is unified, at best this is a 55-45 fight for Jermell, realistically 50-50. This is a P4P fight. Undisputed. WBC, WBA, IBF, WBO, Ring Magazine, Lineal. It's all on the line and I have a feeling this will be a FOTY candidate given the styles.

Jermell 'Ironman' Charlo
Age 31
34-1 18 KO
5' 11
73" reach
Orthodox

Brian 'El Boxi' Carlos Castano
Age 31
17-0-1 12 KO's
5' 7 1/2"
67 1/2" reach
Orthodox
 
Last edited:

Derek Lee

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Promo for this fight has been trash like the Taylor-Ramirez fight
 
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