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Mike Coppinger: Even if Vergil Ortiz and Jaron Ennis don't meet next, 154 pound options intriguing
Ring Magazine
Column
Mike Coppinger
Mike Coppinger
RingMagazine.com
Mike Coppinger: Even if Vergil Ortiz and Jaron Ennis don't meet next, 154-pound options intriguing
The junior middleweight division is one of boxing’s best and deepest. And the weight class has been front and center as talks have dragged out in a very public way for the best fight 154 pounds can deliver.

Of course, that’s a showdown between Jaron Ennis and Vergil Ortiz. Besides the fascinating style clash that features a boxer-puncher against an aggressive pressure fighter, both boxers are in their prime and carry the most starpower in the division.

While talks stall, increasing doubt we see this matchup next, there’s plenty on tap this weekend that will help bring some much-needed clarity to junior middleweight.

Xander Zayas will attempt to unify junior middle titles Saturday with a homecoming fight vs. Abass Baraou in San Juan, Puerto Rico.




Top Rank is still seeking a media-rights deal after their longtime partnership with ESPN ended over the summer. That means Zayas-Baraou will be streamed on the promotion’s “classics” channel that usually features fights from the vast Top Rank library.

Zayas is looking to become the next star from the boxing-crazed island, and while he’s talented and athletic, he’s yet to show the skills needed to develop into an elite fighter. Thankfully, time is on his side at 23 years old.

And while he’s already set to become a unified champion with a win, it won’t be easy if Baraou’s most-recent performance is any indication. The German applied nonstop pressure in a major upset decision over Yoenis Tellez in August to win the title.

Best of all, Baraou left no doubt by scoring a late knockdown. Zayas will have to keep his jab active and throw with volume to fend off Baraou, similar to the way Dalton Smith boxed against Subriel Matias.

Whoever wins will be in line for some lucrative paydays in a star-studded division. (Zayas is rated No. 5 by The Ring at 154 pounds; Baraou is No. 8.)

The two marquee names in the division are Ennis and Ortiz; the sides, of course, have been in talks for months. Ortiz sued Golden Boy Promotions earlier this month, perhaps complicating negotiations toward a fight.




Sebastian Fundora, who holds a title, is expected to defend against Keith Thurman in a rescheduled fight that was postponed in October. Fundora is always fascinating when you consider his dizzying size (6-foot-5 1/2) and aggressive fighting style. He’s No. 2 at 154 pounds, one spot behind Ortiz.

And then there’s Bakhram Murtazaliev, who defends his title vs. Josh Kelly on Saturday in Newscastle, England. Murtalizev ripped through Tim Tszyu in a major upset TKO victory, but that was in October 2024 and he hasn’t competed since.

The Russian will go on the road for his first defense as England’s Kelly looks to add another title to Eddie Hearn’s stable and ostensibly give Matchroom a viable Plan B for Boots if an Ortiz fight can’t be finalized for the spring. Kelly can box well from the outside, but against a dangerous puncher, he must prove his punch resistance and defense are better than he displayed in a 2021 TKO loss to David Avanesyan.

Murtazaliev is rated No. 4 by The Ring at junior middleweight. The No. 3 boxer, Israil Madrimov, returned to the ring Saturday with a tougher than-expected unanimous decision over long-odds underdog Luis Salazar.

The fight was Madrimov’s first since a decision defeat to Ortiz in February. Subsequent to the loss, Madrimov underwent surgery to repair a torn labrum and meniscus. The Uzbek also dealt with the lingering effects of bronchitis and pneumonia vs. Ortiz.

He didn’t resemble the same fighter who gave Terence Crawford so much trouble in 2024. Maybe it was the layoff, or perhaps he’s not past the respiratory issues. Hopefully he’ll find another fight sooner than later to diagnose where he’s at.

Elsewhere at 154 are two fighters who haven’t competed since 2023, yet remain in the public eye when the division is discussed. Jermell Charlo last fought in September of that year when he moved up two weight classes and was throughly outclassed by Canelo Alvarez.

Charlo said on social media recently that he’s looking to return to 154, and given his name recognition he fits as an opponent for many of the top junior middleweights.




Errol Spence is the other. He was slated to return against Fundora last year in a title bid at 154 but remains sidelined if not officially retired. He’s been linked to fights with Charlo and Tszyu over the last few months.

At the back of the rankings is No. 9 Serhii Bohachuk, who returns Sunday vs. Radzhab Butaev on the second Zuffa Boxing show from Las Vegas. With no junior middleweight division in Zuffa, Bohachuk and Butaev will compete at middleweight. While Bohachuk has competed at the 160-pound limit a couple of times, Butaev will make his debut there.

Irishman Callum Walsh defeated Carlos Ocampo on Friday in the inaugural Zuffa Boxing headliner. Walsh, too, departed junior middleweight with the division eliminated from the upstart boxing league.

Mike Coppinger is The Ring’s senior insider. He co-hosts “Inside the Ring” every Monday with Max Kellerman. Follow him on X/Instagram: @MikeCoppinger
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