Former welterweight world champion and respected analyst Timothy Bradley has weighed in on the upcoming fight between WBA and WBO cruiserweight titleholder Gilberto Ramirez and undefeated WBC light heavyweight champion David Benavidez.
A high-stakes clash between David Benavidez and Gilberto āZurdoā Ramirez is set for Saturday, May 2, in Las Vegas, with Timothy Bradley already framing it as one of the more intriguing style fights on the boxing calendar. The matchup pits Ramirezās size and southpaw craft against Benavidezās pressure-heavy offense as Benavidez moves up to test himself in a heavier division.
That added weight is the real storyline. Benavidez has long looked like a fighter who could eventually outgrow 175 pounds, but fighting a seasoned titleholder at cruiserweight is a very different challenge than simply carrying extra size on the scale. For American fans, that is what makes this bout compelling: it is not just about belts, it is about whether Benavidez can remain the same fast-volume puncher against naturally bigger opposition.
Bradley believes Benavidezās aggressive approach can trouble Ramirez, but he also sees major questions that will not be answered until fight night.
āBenavidezās pressure style really can give Ramirez a lot of problems. But you have to seriously think about stamina here. Can David carry his power and speed into a heavier division? There are too many unknowns in this fight, and those answers will have to come in the ring,ā Bradley said.
Even with those concerns, Bradley is siding with Benavidez.
āIām picking Benavidez because I think heās special. He has everything needed to pull this fight out. Thereās a real beast inside him. Iām sure David will force Ramirez to work at his absolute limit. I donāt think he stops him, but heās going to make him work every second,ā Bradley said.
The divisional stakes are obvious. If Benavidez wins, he instantly becomes a major player in yet another weight class and strengthens his case as one of boxingās most versatile elite fighters. If Ramirez wins, he shuts down the idea that Benavidez can simply bully bigger men and cements his own standing as the man to beat at cruiserweight.
Las Vegas is the right setting for that kind of measuring-stick fight, and the biggest thing to watch will be whether Benavidezās engine and volume still look dangerous once the rounds get deep.