Home » Boxeo Azteca / Mexican Boxing » READY TO WIN ONE FOR THE LITTLE GUYS: INTRODUCING MARCOS “DORADO” REYES

chavez_reyesNEW YORK (July 6, 2015) – One of the most recognizable names in boxing, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (48-2-1, 32 KOs) will attempt to get back on the winning track when he meets Mexico’s Marcos “Dorado” Reyes (33-2, 24 KOs) on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIPBOXING® live on SHOWTIME® (10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT) on Saturday, July 18, from theDon Haskins Center at UTEP in El Paso, Texas.

 

Chavez is a Mexican superstar and former middleweight world champion.  He’s also the son of legendary Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., a six-time world champion in three weight classes considered, by acclamation, as the greatest Mexican fighter of all time and as one of the best boxers of all time.

 

So who is Marcos Reyes?

marco reyes posa-pdp

“I’m the boxer who’s going to beat Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.,” he said. “I’m the one who’s going to take advantage of my opportunity of a lifetime.  I’m the one who’ll show everybody that I’m a better fighter than him.

 

“I’ve proven to be a good fighter in my career but I’m hungry to be something more.  I want to make a name for myself.  I’m not intimidated.  I want to beat Chavez so I can fight with the best.”

 

Reyes, of Chihuahua, Chihuahua, Mexico, is 27.  An eight-year-pro, he stands 6-foot-1, the identical height of Chavez.  Chavez is the naturally bigger boxer, of course, a fact that’s not been lost on anybody, including most certainly Reyes.

 

“When they told me about the Chavez fight, I couldn’t believe it,” Reyes said.  “I just said, ‘OK, let’s do it.’ I just didn’t care about anything but making the fight.  I wanted this fight to happen so badly.

 

“I’m a 160-pound fighter, but I really didn’t care about the size difference.  I just wanted the chance against him.  I know I’m a better fighter than him.  I can do much more than him inside the ring.  I can take (a punch) at my weight, I can go toe-to-toe or I can box.  I can use my legs, jab, keep busy in there.  He can’t.

 

“That’s why I’m so excited and happy about this fight.  It’s the major leagues.  It’s everything.  It’s my chance to show the people in the world how good I am.  It can open the door to all the big fights.  I’m going to leave everything I have in the ring, I’m putting my whole heart on the line.”

 

Chavez achieved his success at middleweight but has been scrapping at super middleweight and beyond since abandoning the 160-pound division after a loss to Sergio Martinez in September 2012.

 

Last April 18 on SHOWTIME, Chavez took the dangerous step to move up in weight to face the naturally larger Andrzej Fonfara.  Chavez, who measured 171½ pounds at the weigh-in, Chavez went down in the ninth, made it to his corner after the bell but chose not to continue in a fight he was losing by the scores of 89-80 and 88-81 twice.

 

Chavez has since changed trainers and will be working with Robert Garcia for the 168-pound, 10-round rumble with Reyes.  Reyes will be trained for this fight by International Boxing Hall of Famer Ignacio “Nacho” Beristain.  Until recently, Reyes was trained by Robert Garcia.

 

“This is my second fight in a row with Nacho and fourth overall,” Reyes said, “but I spent most of the last two years training with Robert at his gym.  So Robert and I are on excellent terms.  I know he’s training Chavez now.  But I’m also sure Robert already knows that I’m a better fighter than Chavez is.”

 

“I saw his last fight with Fonfara; Chavez is going down now, I am going up.  The right time to beat Chavez is now.”

 

Reyes isn’t a braggart, merely a determined, confident kid anxiously closing in on a matchup he’s wanted and dreamed of for years.

 

“Of course there’s pressure on me, but Chavez is the fighter with the name,” Reyes said.  “Chavez is the son of a giant, but there’s a saying that goes ‘the sons of giants are dwarfs.’  They never live up to expectations and become giants like their fathers.”

 

Reyes does have concerns about July 18, but they don’t have anything to do with Chavez Jr.

 

“I am worried a little about the judges if the fight goes the distance,” he said.  “Maybe I have a bad decision go against me.  So I don’t want it to go to the judges.  I want to finish him before the 10 full rounds.

 

“From the first bell, I’ll be throwing punches and I will keep throwing punches.  I will do what I have to do to knock Chavez out.”

 

On being the son of a famous father/fighter, Reyes can empathize with what Chavez Jr., has had to endure.  However, Reyes is quick to point out the inherent advantages that go along with it.  He also puts some of the burden on Julio Jr., for not being his own self in the ring.

 

“I think it is hard to handle being the son of someone famous,” Reyes said.  “His father was an icon and he wants to follow the same steps, but he didn’t have it nearly as hard as his father did.  Being the son brings on its own issues.  Chavez doesn’t possess the qualities his dad had yet he wants to fight like his father.  But he shouldn’t.  His dad was short, he’s tall. He shouldn’t try to fight like him at all.

 

“Chavez is his son and has the same name, but in the ring he’s just a guy with the name of Julio Cesar Chavez.  He’s not the same as his father and will never be.

 

“I just don’t see Chavez as a better boxer than me.”

 

Like the vast majority of Mexican boxers, Reyes idolized Chavez Sr.

 

“Julio Sr. was one of my first idols.  I remember watching him when I was five,” Reyes said. “He was one of the main reasons I started to box.  Then when I watched Oscar De La Hoya he became one of my idols.  I saw a lot of their fights.  And Roy Jones Jr.’s fights, too; he was also one of my idols.”

 

At one time during the past year Reyes was world-ranked at middleweight in the WBC (No. 9) and the IBF (No. 15).  He’s campaigned almost exclusively in Mexico where he defeated a string of tough, rugged contenders.  This will be his fourth U.S. appearance, second in three fights and second in Texas.

 

“This is very exciting for me to fight on SHOWTIME,” the come-forward boxer-puncher said.  “It’s my first main event on a major television network and I’m proud and very happy about it.  This is my time and I’m going to take advantage and do what I need to do against Chavez.”

 

Reyes went 63-7 in the amateurs, was a six-time Mexican national champion and a representative of the Mexican National Team in both the 2006 and 2007 Pan American Games.  He turned pro at age 19 in April 2007.

 

In his third fight Reyes captured the Mexican super welterweight title with a third-round TKO.  In his seventh start and United States debut, in July 2008 in Corpus Christi, Texas, he registered a third-round TKO.  Reyes, in his 11th outing, defeated one of Mexico’s all-time most popular former world champions when he outpointed Luis Ramon “Yory Boy” Campas over 12 rounds in March 2009.

 

Reyes made it to 13-0 before he suffered his initial loss on a 10-round decision to Amilcar Milian in 2010.  After losing to Milian, Reyes won his next 19 consecutive fights before losing a controversial majority 10-round decision to El Paso’s Abie Han last Oct. 18 in Carson, Calif.  Reyes’ trainer that night?  Robert Garcia.

 

Reyes might have won two or three of the first seven rounds against Han, but he made things interesting when he scored a knockdown with 30 seconds remaining in the eighth.  Han also crumpled to the canvas from a seemingly meaningless left hook to the chest that may have landed a split second after the bell sounded in the eighth. The first was scored a knockdown, the second was not.

 

The knockdown got Reyes back into the fight and he was on his way to winning the ninth round, too, except that the referee deducted a point from him for a late hit (short left hook to the face) that appeared to clearly connect before the bell.

 

“I was angry with the judges in that fight,” Reyes said.  “I thought I won.  I don’t know what happened. I dropped him twice in the eighth but I only got credit for one.  I got credit for the first one late in the round but the second one in the closing seconds of the round I did not.”

 

Reyes, who has mostly campaigned at 154 and 160 pounds, tipped the scale at a personal-high 165½ pounds for his most recent fight, a unanimous eight-round decision win overDavid Alonso Lopez last Jan. 24.  Reyes won by 77-74 twice and 76-75 despite going down in the second.

 

# # #

In the SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING co-feature, unbeaten fighters McJoe Arroyo (16-0, 8 KOs) of Puerto Rico and Arthur Villanueva (27-0, 12 KOs) of the Philippines will clash in a 12-rounder for the vacant IBF Super Flyweight World title.

 

The SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecast will conclude an action-packed weekend on SHOWTIME and CBS Sports that will feature three different boxing series.  It begins on Friday, July 17, with a ShoBox: The New Generation quadrupleheader live on SHOWTIME (10 p.m. ET/PT) and ends with a day-night Premier Boxing Champions (PBC) on CBS and SCB doubleheader on July 18.

 

Just hours earlier from the Don Haskins Center, PBC on CBS (live at 4 p.m. ET/1 p.m. PT) will offer a terrific doubleheader. In the main event, undefeated British superstar Carl Frampton (20-0, 14 KOs) will make his U.S. debut when he defends his IBF Super Bantamweight World title against Alejandro Cobrita Gonzalez Jr. (25-1-2, 15 KOs).  The co-main event will feature exciting heavyweight Chris The Nightmare Arreola (36-4, 31 KOs) against an opponent to be announced.

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LAS VEGAS – 20 de abril, 2026 – Un duelo del peso súper gallo entre dos contendientes mexicanos dinámicos como Jorge Chávez y José “Tito” Sánchez ahora será el que inaugurará la cartelera repleta de acción con cinco peleas del evento de Benavidez vs. Zurdo por PBC Pay-Per.-View disponible por Prime Video el sábado 2 de mayo desde el T-Mobile Arena de Las Vegas. Posteriormente, el joven mexicano estelar en alza Isaac “Puro México” Lucero ahora se enfrentará al potente Ismael Flores en un choque correspondiente al peso súper welter. Lucero estaba originalmente agendado para pelear contra Alan Sandoval. La alineación incluye al Campeón Mundial del Peso Súper Mediano de la AMB Armando “Toro” Reséndiz protagonizando un duelo imperdible ante el dinámico ex campeón mundial Jaime Munguía en un evento co-estelar explosivo, y dos contendientes de la división de las 140 libras como Oscar Duarte y Ángel Fierro se fajarán durante 10 asaltos. Esta cartelera preliminar comenzará a partir de las 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT y precederá a un duelo único de México vs. México entre el campeón mundoal invicto de dos divisiones David “El Monstro” Benavidez y el Campeón Mundial Unificado del Peso Crucero de la AMB y el OMB Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramírez en el evento principal de la noche. Entradas ya a la venta a través de www.AXS.com. El evento es promovido por Golden Boy Promotions y Sampson Boxing en asociación con TGB Promotions. Reséndiz vs. Munguía es promovido en asociación con Warriors Boxing y Zanfer Boxing Promotions. Duarte vs. Fierro es promovido en asociación con Cancun Boxing y BXSTRS. El PPV estará disponible para la compra por Prime Video, sin necesidad de ser miembro de Prime, y también podrá ser adquirido ingresando a DAZN.com. Además, la gente también podrá seguir accediendo a la transmisión a través de los medios tradicionales por cable y satelitales. **ISAAC LUCERO VS. ISMAEL FLORES** Habiendo obtenido un par de victorias por KO en 2025, el contendiente inmaculado en ascenso Isaac “Puro México” Lucero buscará llevar ese impulso al 2026 cuando enfrente a su también invicto compatriota Alan Sandoval, quien debutará en Estados Unidos en este duelo súper welter a 10 rounds. Lucero (18-0, 14 KO) se profesionalizó en 2019 tras una trayectoria amateur en la que obtuvo cinco medallas nacionales representando a México. Originario de La Paz, Baja California Sur, México, Lucero ha noqueado a sus siete últimos rivales, llegando al 2 de mayo, además de contar con dos victorias por decisión unánime a 10 asaltos. Con el objetivo de consolidar su llegada a Estados Unidos, Lucero ha establecido su campamento en Las Vegas, donde entrena bajo la tutela del reconocido preparador Bob Santos. Recientemente, en diciembre, Lucero dominó al veterano Roberto Valenzuela Jr. y detuvo el combate al final del octavo round. “Estoy muy agradecido con mi equipo y con todos los que trabajaron para hacer esto posible”, declaró Lucero. “Pelear el fin de semana del Cinco de Mayo es el sueño de todo boxeador mexicano, y acepto este reto con la máxima profesionalidad, ya que enfrentaré el desafío más importante de mi carrera en este gran escenario. ¡Les demostraré a todos por qué esta cartelera será ‘Puro México’!” El argentino Flores (17-1-1, 12 KOs) se mudó a España para buscar cumplir sus sueños como boxeador, y se ha destacado desde el 2021. Este pugilista de 27 años ha prevalecido en siete peleas consecutivas, cinco antes de que suene la campana final, desde que perdió por puntos ante Jorge Fortea en el 2023. Más recientemente, Flores le agregó dos triunfos por nocaut a esa racha en el 2025, apabullando a Johan Nova en dos rounds en marzo, antes de detener a Oliver Quintana Sánchez en octubre del año pasado. “Estoy muy entusiasmado con esta pelea. La pelea que vengo queriendo hace tiempo”, dijo Flores. “Esta pelea me va a cambiar la vida. Nunca dejé de entrenar, así que siempre estuve más que listo para aprovechar esta oportunidad. Estoy en gran física y daré el batacazo. Llego a Estados Unidos para quedarme por mucho tiempo”. **JORGE CHÁVEZ VS. TITO SÁNCHEZ** En una atractiva pelea del peso súper gallo, dos contendientes invictos en ascenso se enfrentan cuando Jorge Chávez y José “Tito” Sánchez entren al ring para protagonizar un duelo a 10 asaltos que otorgará al ganador la victoria más importante de su carrera en su camino hacia un título mundial. El chihuahuense de 26 años, Chávez (15-0-1, 8 KOs), regresa a la acción tras iniciar el 2026 vengando la única mancha en su historial. En enero, Chávez se impuso por decisión unánime ante Manuel Flores, después de que ambos pugilistas hubieran empatado por decisión mayoritaria en julio pasado. Originario de Tijuana y ahora entrenándose basado en Orange County, los dos encuentros de Chávez contra Flores fueron sus primeras peleas a 10 asaltos, luego de ganar por decisión dos combates previos a ocho rounds con marcadores casi perfectos. Profesional desde 2021, la victoria de Chávez en enero también le valió el título estatal de California en la categoría de las 122 libras. “Estoy muy agradecido de ser un peleador de ascendencia mexicana que compite en el escenario más grande del mundo durante un pay-per-view del fin de semana del Cinco de Mayo”, declaró Chávez. “Agradezco a todo mi equipo por esta oportunidad de demostrar mis habilidades en un evento tan importante. He trabajado con ahínco toda mi vida para obtener esta oportunidad y tengo la intención de ofrecer un gran espectáculo el 2 de mayo. ¡Viva México!” Representando a Cathedral City, California, Sánchez (15-0, 9 KOs) es entrenado por el reconocido Joel Díaz mientras busca dejar huella en la división. El púgil de 26 años puso fin a un parate de 15 meses en enero de este año, cuando regresó al cuadrilátero y noqueó en el sexto asalto a Jesús Eduardo Ramírez Rubio. Previamente, Sánchez había completado un impresionante 2024: primero venció por decisión unánime al veterano Erik Ruiz en abril, antes de lograr un nocaut en el octavo round sobre Edwin Palomares en octubre. “El 2 de mayo, por fin, tendré la oportunidad de pelear en una cartelera grande en Las Vegas y cumplir un sueño que he tenido desde niño”, dijo Sánchez. “He entrenado muy duro para llegar a este nivel, y quiero agradecer a mi familia y a todo mi equipo por esta oportunidad de brillar frente al público en Las Vegas durante este gran fin de semana boxístico. Compren sus boletos y vengan temprano a ver un gran espectáculo”.