ONE PUNCH-KO! | Bam Rodriguez vs Antonio Vargas | Highlights
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48件のコメント
Este tipo es un prodigio del boxeo, como camina el ring parece un torero… Yo creo que le gana a Inoue
Naoya would put him away
This young man is great, but that Japanese man is different skills.
Four of the six fighters you mentioned—*Shakur Stevenson**, **Devin Haney**, **Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez**, and your reference **Gervonta Davis**—are officially three-division champions. **Teofimo Lopez* and *Ryan Garcia* have not yet reached that milestone.
Here is exactly how long it took the four who did, ranked from fastest to longest:
| Fighter | Pro Debut | 3rd Division Title Date | Total Time | Number of Fights |
|—|—|—|—|—|
| *Shakur Stevenson* | Apr 2017 | Nov 2023 | 6 years, 7 months | 21 |
| *Gervonta Davis* | Feb 2013 | Jun 2021 | 8 years, 4 months | 25 |
| *Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez* | Mar 2017 | Jun 2026 | 9 years, 3 months | 24 |
| *Devin Haney* | Dec 2015 | Nov 2025 | 9 years, 11 months | 34 |
## The Three-Division Champions
*Shakur Stevenson*
* *Divisions:* Featherweight (WBO), Super Featherweight (WBO, WBC), Lightweight (WBC)
* *The Milestone:* Stevenson reached three divisions the fastest of this group. He hit the mark in his *21st fight* by defeating Edwin De Los Santos for the WBC Lightweight title, taking *6 years and 7 months* from his pro debut. (Note: He has since captured a title in a fourth division at Super Lightweight in early 2026).
*Gervonta "Tank" Davis (Reference)*
* *Divisions:* Super Featherweight (IBF, WBA), Lightweight (WBA), Super Lightweight (WBA)
* *The Milestone:* Davis secured his third weight class in his *25th fight* by jumping to 140 lbs to defeat Mario Barrios for the WBA (Regular) Super Lightweight title, taking *8 years and 4 months**. *(While the "Regular" version of the WBA belt is debated among boxing purists regarding its prestige compared to the "Super" version, he is officially recorded as a three-division titlist).
*Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez*
* *Divisions:* Super Flyweight (WBC, WBA, WBO), Flyweight (WBO, IBF), Bantamweight (WBA)
* *The Milestone:* Bam just achieved this over the weekend in his *24th fight* with a knockout over Antonio Vargas for the WBA Bantamweight title, taking **9 years and 3 months**. Notably, his title path involved dropping down in weight to unify at Flyweight before moving up to Bantamweight.
*Devin Haney*
* *Divisions:* Lightweight (Undisputed), Super Lightweight (WBC), Welterweight (WBO)
* *The Milestone:* Haney captured his third division in his *34th fight* by defeating Brian Norman Jr. for the WBO Welterweight title in November 2025. Because he turned pro so young in Mexico before fighting in the U.S., he has the most fights on this list, taking *9 years and 11 months* to reach three divisions.
## The Remaining Group
*Teofimo Lopez*
* *Status:* Two-division champion.
* *Details:* Lopez has captured unified glory at Lightweight (defeating Vasiliy Lomachenko) and the WBO title at Super Lightweight (defeating Josh Taylor). He has not yet moved up to Welterweight to challenge for a third division.
*Ryan Garcia*
* *Status:* Single-division champion.
* *Details:* Garcia captured the interim WBC Lightweight title in 2021, and recently captured his first full world championship by defeating Mario Barrios for the WBC Welterweight title in February 2026. He has fought across three weight classes but only holds a full championship in one.
Separating who has accomplished the most from who is the most impressive requires looking at the sport through two different lenses. Accomplishments are about hardware, unifications, and division hopping. Impressiveness is about mechanics: applying the 10-point must system, executing clean punches, and demonstrating elite distance management.
Here is how this era of fighters stacks up when evaluated on both the resumes they’ve built and the technical mastery they display in the ring.
## Who Has Accomplished the Most (The Hardware)
When grading purely on official milestones, undisputed crowns, and clearing out divisions, the ranking looks like this:
1. *Devin Haney:* He holds the deepest pure resume of the group. He achieved Undisputed status at Lightweight (holding all four belts simultaneously), captured the WBC at Super Lightweight, and most recently secured the WBO Welterweight title against Brian Norman Jr. in late 2025. Capturing titles across three divisions while securing an undisputed crown puts him at the top for hardware.
2. *Shakur Stevenson:* Following his masterclass victory over Teofimo Lopez in January 2026 to capture the WBO and Ring Magazine Super Lightweight titles, Shakur officially became a four-division world champion. He previously unified at 130 lbs and captured gold at 126 and 135.
3. *Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez:* He has moved between divisions seamlessly, opting to unify rather than just grab single belts. He unified the Flyweight division (WBO, IBF), nearly unified Super Flyweight (WBC, WBA, WBO), and just jumped to Bantamweight to win a title in his third division.
4. *Gervonta Davis:* Tank is officially a three-division champion and the biggest commercial draw of the group. However, his resume lacks the undisputed or heavily unified crowns that Haney, Stevenson, and Rodriguez have relentlessly pursued, placing him just behind them in pure historical milestones.
5. *Teofimo Lopez:* A two-division champion who captured unified glory at Lightweight (dethroning Vasiliy Lomachenko) and the lineal crown at 140 lbs (beating Josh Taylor). His momentum, however, was recently stalled by his wide decision loss to Stevenson.
6. *Ryan Garcia:* He holds the thinnest official resume. While he just recently secured his first full world championship by capturing the WBC Welterweight title against Mario Barrios in February 2026, he lacks the multi-division and unification history of his peers.
## Who is the Most Impressive (Technical Mastery)
If we treat boxing objectively—where a clean punch landed is a point scored and taking a clean punch is a defensive failure—the ranking shifts to reward ring dominance, distance management, and the ability to neutralize elite competition.
1. *Shakur Stevenson:* He is the absolute gold standard for active ring dominance in this era. He does not simply avoid punches; he suffocates opponents' offense through elite distance management and positioning. He consistently lands clean punches while completely neutralizing the other fighter's ability to score, executing the 10-point must system flawlessly. His recent shutout over Teofimo Lopez perfectly illustrated this mastery.
2. *Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez:* Bam fights brilliantly in the pocket without conceding points. His footwork and ability to create angles allow him to land incredibly clean combinations while remaining defensively responsible. He dismantles top-tier competition by systematically breaking down their defense rather than just relying on raw power.
3. *Gervonta Davis:* Tank's defensive acumen is highly underrated by casual observers. He is incredibly efficient, using high-level ring IQ to set traps and manage distance. He routinely banks data in the early rounds, minimizing clean shots taken, before walking opponents into devastating counters.
4. *Devin Haney:* Haney is an elite ring general who uses a highly educated jab to score clean points and dictate the geography of the fight. However, he occasionally suffers lapses in his defensive fundamentals against high-level speed or power (as seen against Garcia), which drops him slightly below the top three in pure defensive airtightness.
## The Least Impressive (Defensive Liabilities)
The bottom two in technical execution routinely concede points due to mechanical flaws, often masking poor fundamentals behind the narrative of having an "aggressive style."
1. *Teofimo Lopez:* When facing stationary targets, his explosive athleticism and reflexes look spectacular. However, against disciplined technicians, his inability to systematically manage distance is exposed. He frequently lunges or relies on raw reflexes rather than sound footwork, leading to point concessions against fighters who control the geography of the ring.
2. *Ryan Garcia:* From a purely mechanical standpoint, Garcia is the least impressive of the group. He possesses elite hand speed, but his defensive fundamentals are glaringly poor. He frequently fights with his chin in the air, drops his hands when exiting exchanges, and uses flat footwork. He allows opponents to land entirely too many clean punches, relying on his athleticism to bail him out of defensive failures that elite competition readily exploits.
Focusing on the 11 male undisputed champions of the four-belt era, here is how the absolute elite of the sport stack up when separated by historical hardware and pure ring mechanics.
## Who Has Accomplished the Most (The Hardware)
When grading purely on historical milestones, multi-division unifications, and clearing out weight classes, the resume rankings look like this:
1. *Terence Crawford:* The absolute pinnacle of the four-belt era. He is the first and only three-division undisputed champion (140, 147, and 168 lbs), moving up to dethrone Canelo Alvarez in late 2025 to secure a world title in his fifth weight class.
2. *Naoya Inoue:* Undisputed in two weight classes (118 and 122 lbs) and a four-division world champion. His run to collect all the belts across multiple weights was historically fast and dominant.
3. *Oleksandr Usyk:* Undisputed in two weight classes (Cruiserweight and Heavyweight). Clearing out the heaviest divisions in the sport against naturally larger men is a monumental historical achievement.
4. *Canelo Alvarez:* Undisputed at Super Middleweight, but captured titles in four total divisions (154, 160, 168, and 175 lbs) against a massive roster of elite competition.
5. *Devin Haney:* Undisputed at Lightweight (135 lbs), plus full world titles at 140 and 147 lbs. Securing belts in three divisions puts his hardware just above the single-division undisputed kings.
6. *Bernard Hopkins:* The godfather of the four-belt era. He was the first to do it at Middleweight, logging an absurd 20 consecutive title defenses before later unifying belts at Light Heavyweight.
7. *Dmitry Bivol:* Reached the summit by capturing undisputed status at Light Heavyweight in early 2025, avenging his sole loss to Artur Beterbiev, while also holding a dominant win over Canelo on his resume.
8. *Artur Beterbiev:* Secured the undisputed Light Heavyweight crown in late 2024. Until running into Bivol, he maintained a 100% knockout ratio while systematically ripping every belt from the division's champions.
9. *Jermell Charlo:* Cleared out a deep 154-lb division to become undisputed.
10. *Josh Taylor:* Cleared out the 140-lb division to become undisputed, dethroning several undefeated champions in a short window.
11. *Jermain Taylor:* Briefly held the undisputed Middleweight crown after dethroning Hopkins, but his reign was short-lived and lacked the multi-division dominance of the men above him.
## Who is the Most Impressive (Technical Mastery)
If we treat boxing objectively—where a clean punch landed is a point scored and taking a clean punch is a direct defensive failure—this list rewards ring geography, flawless distance management, and the ability to neutralize elite opponents without conceding points.
1. *Dmitry Bivol:* The absolute gold standard of distance management and textbook 1-2 mechanics. He does not rely on raw power; he neutralizes devastating punchers (Canelo, Ramirez, and Beterbiev in their rematch) by controlling the geography of the ring so perfectly that opponents simply cannot score.
2. *Terence Crawford:* A switch-hitting savant. He data-banks perfectly in the early rounds and systematically dismantles opponents by exploiting distance and timing. He leaves zero defensive gaps and executes the 10-point must system flawlessly, culminating in out-boxing Canelo Alvarez cleanly across 12 rounds.
3. *Oleksandr Usyk:* A masterclass in footwork and angles. He out-points heavyweights who significantly outweigh him by dictating the distance, landing clean combinations, and pivoting out of danger before the opponent can retaliate.
4. *Naoya Inoue:* While known for terrifying power, his pocket defense and punch efficiency are immaculate. He smothers offensive output and rarely wastes a punch, ensuring he scores cleanly while minimizing defensive failures.
5. *Bernard Hopkins:* An archetype of ring IQ and defensive geography. He dictated the pace, smothered opponents on the inside to prevent clean punches, and expertly managed range.
6. *Devin Haney:* Elite ring generalship and spatial awareness. He banks rounds effortlessly with his jab, though he drops slightly behind the top five due to occasional defensive lapses when his feet stop moving against high-speed or elite power.
7. *Artur Beterbiev:* A highly underrated technician. His elite ring-cutting meticulously forces opponents into defensive corners. However, he drops slightly here because he is willing to absorb clean punches in order to land his own.
8. *Canelo Alvarez:* Features exceptional upper-body movement and high-guard defense in the pocket. However, he relies heavily on plotting forward with static feet and a low punch output, allowing high-volume boxers with superior footwork to outscore him cleanly.
## The Least Impressive (Defensive Liabilities)
The bottom three of the undisputed club routinely concede points due to mechanical flaws, often giving away rounds or relying on raw attributes over technical distance management.
1. *Jermain Taylor:* Mechanically the weakest of the undisputed era. He relied completely on raw athleticism and hand speed. His distance management evaporated when he fatigued, frequently leaving his chin exposed, which directly led to massive point concessions and devastating knockout losses late in fights.
2. *Jermell Charlo:* Suffers from a very low offensive output. He relies on landing single, fight-changing power shots. Against disciplined opponents with high guards, he gives away far too many rounds on the scorecards because he fails to actively dominate the geography or score consistently with a jab.
3. *Josh Taylor:* Frequently abandons distance management to brawl on the inside. While it made for gritty unifications, it forced him to absorb a massive amount of clean punches. This mechanical flaw left him exposed against slicker counter-punchers who easily picked up points from the outside.
🎉🎉🎉
Bams is gonna get hurt fighting inue
Turn'em !" and BAM !!!!
2:27 this was nasty work from Bam
ตัวเล็ก ไปหน่อย
He can't beat beat inoue.
I'm promised
7:07 the way he fell down was like animation from a fight night game when he got k.o'ed
Casimero vs. Bam Rodriguez
Literally a fight night champion KO!! Firstly huge huge credit to Vargas what a warrior and brave fighter 👏 loma must have been smiling watching that, he had such a huge influence on the sport Rodriguez style is heavily influenced by Loma! I think Rodriguez skills wise is the most talented fighter in boxing. The man is exceptionally talented.
bam is all time great but im not seeing him beat inouye at 125. they need to do it at 121 max cuz bam is just to small
Nice but BAM can't match with Inoue
Let's Go Bam ! 🙏✊🥊 Respect from San Anto brother!! Great fight 💪
現地はこんなに盛り上がってたんかい
日本語実況つけるのはいいけど現地の音聞こえなくするのはマジでゴミすぎ、DAZN Japan。
Bam and loma have similar footwork
Los dos tienen sangre mexicana. Se les nota
Bam: lemme dance with you! =D LOL
That knockout was insane. 🔥🔥🔥 The footwork of Bam is on another level!
Too much speed difference. Vargas was tapping him with the shots but no real effect on Bam.
ทักษะการออกหมัดสวยงามมาก
I think Bam is ready for Inoue, that's a hella of a fight
Easily the most exciting boxer to watch right now..
Why does Vargas fight like a heavyweight lol
Inoue should move up and fight Rafael Espinoza. this was Bams 1st fight at 118. People want Bam to move up another weight class and his 1st fight to be Inoue. It's not gonna happen
Bam stops inoue
If you watch the fight closely bam already had his this fight in his pocket he was playing with him he knew that his power wasn’t anything to be scared of so he was just playing with his food you think if he fights inoue he’ll do the same ? No he’ll take more precaution . This was a walk in the park for bam
😮😮😮
Bam è il miglior pugile in circolazione. Sempre bello da vedere.
Wow
🎉
I think Bam can be inoue he throws his shot then turns his angles are nice bro his footwork is crazy sick
Furthest thing from a "one punch KO" but whatever… What a legend Bam
Banger🥊🎆
Bam was looking like Orlando canizales out there fr 🤷♂️
Monster will make Bam look ordinary! He gotta do much better then this performance!! Bam did knock him out, I give him that.
Casimero said bam is food for inoweak 😂 chocolate bam 😂
Inoue has got dropped dude
Yeahhhhhh… sorry dawg Inoue gonna land a 3-5 or a 5-3 and If Bam turns right; he’s going to sleep.
Johnriel Casimero next 😅 Quadro Alas angas ng Pilipinas
Bam moving like Loma
Bam seems to drop his right hand a lot and that leaves him open for the left hook. He’s gonna have to fix that.
Weight classes exist for a reason and I think Bam maxes out at this weight.
Easy work this two champion for CASIMERO 🔥 BAM Vs Quadro ALAS🇵🇭
Someone doesn't understand the meaning of "One Punch-KO" Hahahaha