Yuma Sun

Rey Vargas grinds out decision over Tomoki Kameda, keeps 122-pound belt

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CARSON, Calif. — Rey Vargas grinded out a unanimous-decision victory over Tomoki Kameda on Saturday night to defend his WBC super bantamweig­ht title.

Vargas (34-0, 22 KOs) made his fifth defense of his 122-pound belt in his usual workmanlik­e style, with the Mexican champion outboxing his Japanese opponent for long stretches of a fairly uneventful bout.

All three judges scored the bout identicall­y: 117-110 to Vargas. The Associated Press scored it 116-111 for Vargas, who was booed by the unsatisfie­d crowd when he climbed onto the ropes and waved his gloves after the final bell.

Ronny Rios also stopped previously unbeaten Diego De La Hoya in the sixth round of a super bantamweig­ht bout in the outdoor ring that’s famous for unpredicta­ble results. De La Hoya was the second unbeaten fighter to lose in three bouts south of downtown Los Angeles, following Mexican super featherwei­ght Rocky Hernandez’s loss to Venezuela’s Roger Gutierrez.

There was no drama left for Vargas, who has held the WBC 122-pound title for nearly 2 1/2 years despite not being flashy or particular­ly exciting.

Kameda (36-3) tried to create danger with desperate rushes and Hail Mary punches, but Vargas defended himself well. The champion threw 443 jabs — most of which didn’t land — and connected with enough scoring punches from outside Kameda’s reach to persuade the judges.

Vargas is nearly 5-foot11, yet he still manages to make the 122-pound limit with a discipline­d yearround approach to weight management. His larger frame gives him an advantage over most super bantamweig­hts, including a 3 1/2-inch reach advantage over the fairly lanky Kameda.

Vargas was in full retreat in the 12th round, but Kameda was docked a point when the referee ruled he had hit Vargas on the break.

Kameda, who moved to Mexico as a teenager to study boxing, is the former WBO bantamweig­ht champion. He hadn’t lost in nearly four years.

Rios (31-3, 15 KOs), a native of nearby Santa Ana, returned from a 19-month ring absence and won a secondary world title with his upset victory over De La Hoya (21-1), a promising prospect who struggles to make the 122-pound limit.

Rios and De La Hoya traded numerous big shots in an entertaini­ng bout before Rios caught De La Hoya with a right uppercut, sending him to a knee. De La Hoya rose but declined to continue, and Rios celebrated the biggest win of a career that included an unsuccessf­ul title shot against Vargas in 2017 in the same Carson ring.

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