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MarvNation Surprisingly Wins Zepeda-Prograis Purse Bid

MarvNation Surprisingly Wins Zepeda-Prograis Purse Bid
Mikey Williams- Top Rank

Boxing News

MarvNation Surprisingly Wins Zepeda-Prograis Purse Bid

In a shocker, Southern California club show promoter MarvNation Promotions easily won a purse bid on Tuesday to gain promotional rights to the vacant WBC junior welterweight title fight between Jose Zepeda and former titleholder Regis Prograis.

MarvNation bid a whopping $2,400,000 to easily top the second-place bid of $1,260,050 by TGB Promotions, which, like MarvNation, does not promote either boxer.

Probellum, which is Prograis’ promoter, bid $1,060,000 and Zepeda promoter Zanfer Promotions offered $1,004,500 million.

Under WBC rules, 10 percent of the winning bid — $240,000 – will go into a WBC escrow account and ultimately will go to the winner of the fight as a bonus. The rest of the bid total, $2,160,000, will be split 50-50 between the fighters, which is $1,080,000 apiece.

“We can’t wait to host this fight between Jose Zepeda and Regis Prograis,” Marvin Rodriguez, the CEO of MarvNation Promotions, told Big Fight Weekend. “MarvNation Promotions, alongside Legendz Entertainment, are prepared to make a huge statement in the sport of boxing, and this purse bid win is a sign of even better things to come.”

Rodriguez, who is required under the winning bid to stage the fight within 90s days — by the end of November – added that he expects it to take place in Las Vegas or Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Rodriguez founded MarvNation Promotions 2014 and promoted concerts before also putting on boxing cards beginning in 2018, but the company has never promoted a fight as anywhere close to as significant as Zepeda-Prograis.

“They must have a (broadcast) platform which validates their bid, and if in fact this does happen, which I hope it will, then the winners are the fighters,” Probellum president Richard Schaefer told Big Fight Weekend. “Regis Prograis in my opinion is the best 140-pounder in the world today, and Zepeda is a top contender also. This is a mouthwatering matchup between two of the most exciting fighters in the division and I wish MarvNation all the best in putting on this fight.”

Josh Taylor, who unified the four major belts to become the undisputed champion in May 2021, recently vacated the WBC title to pursue a rematch with Jack Catterall rather than face mandatory challenger Zepeda. So, the WBC ordered the vacant title bout between Zepeda and former unified titlist Jose Ramirez, who lost a decision to Taylor in the undisputed fight and had beaten Zepeda before that by debatable decision in a defense. But on the eve of a purse bid for Zepeda-Ramirez II, Ramirez bowed out, saying he would not be able to fight this fall because he is planning his wedding and getting married.

With Ramirez out, the WBC ordered Zepeda (35-2, 27 KOs), 33, of La Puente, California, to face the next available contender in its rankings, which was Prograis (27-1, 23 KOs), 33, a southpaw from New Orleans.
Zepeda will be getting his third shot at a world title. Besides the disputed loss to Ramirez in February 2019, he suffered a dislocated left shoulder that caused a second-round stoppage loss to Terry Flanagan for the vacant WBO lightweight title in 2015.

Zepeda is riding a five-fight winning streak, including a highlight-reel fifth-round knockout of former titlist Ivan Baranchyk in the unforgettable 2020 fight of the year in which they were each knocked down four times and there were knockdowns in every round. In his most recent fight, Zepeda crushed Josue Vargas in the first round in October.

Prograis won the WBA 140-pound title by sixth-round knockout of Kiryl Relikh during the World Boxing Series tournament in April 2019 but lost it by majority decision to Taylor in his first defense, a unification fight in the October 2019 tournament final.

Since the loss, Prograis has won three fights in a row, all by knockout. Most recently, he stopped Tyrone McKenna in the sixth round on March 19 in Dubai.

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Since 2000, award-winning reporter Dan Rafael has covered boxing full time and been ringside for thousands of fights, first for five years at USA Today and then for 15 years at ESPN, where he wrote and appeared on various television, radio and streaming programs. In 2013, Dan was honored by the Boxing Writers Association of America with the Nat Fleischer award for career excellence in boxing journalism. Dan brings his great insight to the Big Fight Weekend site, podcast and more!

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