Las Vegas Review-Journal

Knockout artist Berlanga is money in bank

New York native has gone the distance only once

- By Sam Gordon Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Bysamgordo­n on Twitter.

Undefeated super middleweig­ht Edgar Berlanga thought he was rich. His father, Edgar Sr., had offered him $100 per victory in the Ringside World Championsh­ips.

And $400 was an awful lot of money for a 9-year-old.

“It was in twenties. I had a little stack,” Berlanga said with a grin. “I bought a pair of Jordans. I was little, so my size was probably 80 bucks. I bought a little outfit. I thought I was the little man at 9 years old.”

He fights for a whole lot more than $100 these days.

Berlanga, now 24, is one of the top young fighters in boxing. He is back in Las Vegas this week on the undercard of the Tyson Fury-deontay Wilder heavyweigh­t title fight. Berlanga (17-0, 16 knockouts) will face 30-year-old Marcelo Esteban Coceres (30-2-1, 16 KOS) of Argentina.

The Brooklyn, New York, native began his profession­al career with an astounding streak of 16 first-round knockouts and has his sights set on eventual super-middleweig­ht supremacy.

“I think I’m on the verge of becoming one of the biggest superstars in boxing,” Berlanga said. “I’m a champ already. … It just hasn’t caught up yet.”

Berlanga carries himself with an unwavering sense of confidence. It’s an attitude he cultivated while growing up in Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborho­od.

His Puerto Rican heritage conjured in Berlanga a sense of reverance for the island’s iconic fighters, namely Felix Trinidad. And the elder Berlanga thought the sport of boxing could help harness some of his son’s youthful energy: “I knew if I took care of him the right way … he’s going to make it,” he said.

He was right.

Berlanga began boxing when he was 7, training every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. He initially resisted. He said he’d cry on his way to the gym.

But “by the time I’m out of the gym, I’m the happiest kid,” he said. “I liked it, I just hated the process of going to the gym. I wanted to be outside. I wanted to be a kid at the park. … Just from there, kept climbing the ladder.”

Berlanga won his first 15 amateur fights, including the four at the Ringside World Championsh­ips — and added a bevy of other amateur honors, including a Golden Gloves junior national championsh­ip.

He said he discovered his prodigious power at the age 17 after watching somebody get knocked out while sparring.

“It just grew in me. I already knew I had it in me. I just didn’t know how to use it,” Berlanga said.

Berlanga used his power for the first time as a profession­al on April 29, 2016. He knocked out Jorge Pedroz in the first round that night, thereby beginning the streak. He won his first nine fights to catch Top Rank’s attention and signed a contract in 2019 with the Las Vegas-based promotiona­l firm.

He finally went the distance in his last fight April 24, beating Demond Nicholson by unanimous decision.

Berlanga can start a new knockout streak Saturday and is eyeing a fight next year against one of the top 10 fighters in the 168-pound division. He’ll fight again in December at Madison Square Garden and could fight in Puerto Rico in March and in New York next summer during the same weekend as the Puerto Rican Day Parade.

Boxing is a marathon, not a sprint, he says, and he trusts in his trajectory.

“We win Saturday, in December we step up a little bit more. In March a little more. Like that,” Berlanga said.

“In 2023, I’m looking for the title.”

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Super middleweig­ht contender Edgar Berlanga puts his undefeated record on the line Saturday.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Super middleweig­ht contender Edgar Berlanga puts his undefeated record on the line Saturday.

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