

Carlos Zarate won 55 straight battles before he was stopped.

Miguel Canto – Miguel Canto is one of the greatest fighters in the flyweight division, who took the tile away from a Japanese fighter and defended it four times in a row.Ricardo Lopez – Ricardo Lopez defended the title 21 times, which speaks for itself, alongside 51 wins, 38 by the way of a knockout.Erik Morales, the former owner of world titles in four divisions, scored a decision win over Manny Pacquiao in 2015, which is one of the greatest successes in Mexican boxing history, and the greatest victory of “El Terrible”. Erik Morales – “El Terrible” is the first Mexican boxer who won titles in four different weight divisions.Marco Antonio Barrera destroyed some of the greatest warriors of his era – Naseem Hamed, Kennedy McKinney, and Johnny Tapia… Marco Antonio Barrera – “El Barreta” was the champion in three weight classes.Despite “Baby” having never been on the list of world champions, his bout against Sixto Escobar in 1934 was the beginning of the Mexico vs Puerto Rico heated rivalry. Rodolfo “Baby” Casanova – amazing 81 wins throughout his career.But the difference is that I'm the champion now.There were many high-level Mexicans in boxing history, but the time has come to list the 12 most successful ones: I sparred with him about six years ago, but we've both changed a lot since then. But our main goal is to win on Saturday and put on a good show for the fans. Mexican fans love boxing and if you fight hard, they will respect you. "But little by little, if you keep winning and winning, things change. "At first no one in Mexico knew me or respected me," said Kameda. But Kameda is confident his fans will stay loyal to him. When he meets Hernandez on Saturday, the bout will pit a long-established Mexican contender against an adopted Mexican champion.
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"He was asked to compare himself to his brothers and he said, 'I'm the best of the brothers.' It's not easy to become a star in America when you're as small as Kameda, but given his tie to Al Haymon and the TV exposure that goes with it, he has a good chance to shine."ĭeCubas said Kameda is extremely popular in both Mexico and Japan. "Kameda is an emerging star, he can box and punch, he has very fast hands, and he's confident," said Farhood. That tactic has long been a trait of great Mexican fighters, and Kameda developed it at the Pancho Rosales Gym, which was once the home of Canelo Alvarez. In his Showtime debut earlier this year, Kameda knocked out Pungluang Sor Singyu with a left hook to the body. "He said he went there so he could be different from his brothers." "Since Tomoki went to Mexico before he had any amateur fights, his style was developed there," Showtime boxing analyst Steve Farhood said. Tomoki, now 23, is 30-0 (19 KOs) and will defend his title Saturday night against Alejandro Hernandez in Chicago in a fight televised by Showtime. Kameda won the WBO bantamweight title in August of 2013, making the Kameda brothers the first trio of siblings to simultaneously hold world titles in boxing history. I love tacos, chicken or steak, it doesn't matter. I like the people, the culture, the food. "I wanted to get better and Mexico is one of the best boxing schools out there, so I packed up and left," said Kameda, through translator and advisor Luis DeCubas Jr.
