Fight Week Is Here: Sebastian Fundora Puts His WBC Title on the Line Against Keith Thurman This Saturday

LAS VEGAS — WBC Super Welterweight World Champion Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora stands alongside challenger Keith “One Time” Thurman ahead of their March 28 showdown at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. 📸 @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

LAS VEGAS — Fight week is officially underway, and Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, the 154-pound division will be front and center. WBC Super Welterweight World Champion Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora defends his title against former unified welterweight champion Keith “One Time” Thurman in the main event of a PBC Pay-Per-View on Prime Video. The main card starts at 5 PM PT, with free prelims beginning at 2:30 PM PT.
This one has been building for a while. Originally scheduled for last October, the fight was pushed back after Fundora suffered a hand injury in sparring just weeks before fight night. Now, after months of waiting, both men are finally in Las Vegas and ready to settle it.

LAS VEGAS — Thurman checking the height. Fundora not flinching. The size difference is real, and so is the challenge ahead for “One Time.” Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, we find out if experience can overcome everything else. 📸 @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

The Champion: Sebastian Fundora (23-1-1, 15 KOs)

At just 28 years old, Fundora is one of the most unusual fighters in boxing. He stands 6-foot-5½ with an 80-inch reach, but don’t let the dimensions fool you — “The Towering Inferno” doesn’t fight like a tall man. He prefers to get inside, crowd opponents, and work with relentless volume. It’s an unorthodox style that has confused and worn down opponents throughout his rise to the top.

LAS VEGAS — The belt. The banner. The champion. Fundora sat composed at the presser — calm in a way that only comes from knowing the work is done. Saturday night in Las Vegas, he defends it all. @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

Fundora’s only career loss came against Brian Mendoza, a fight he was controlling before being stopped in stunning fashion. Since then, he has responded with a purpose. He dominated Tim Tszyu twice — claiming the WBC strap in their first meeting and finishing it in seven rounds in the rematch — and he has not looked back. A quick stoppage of Chordale Booker rounded out an impressive recent run.

The extra time away due to the injury hasn’t rattled him. Fundora said it himself: “Having more time to focus on one opponent is always a blessing.” He enters this fight sharp, focused, and hungry to make a bigger statement. “This is my third time fighting at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, and this time we’re headlining,” Fundora said. “I’m going in there to rip his head off. He’s just another opponent to me when it comes to the ring.”

LAS VEGAS — The work doesn’t stop. Fundora in the gym with fight night on the horizon — and the poster on the wall as a reminder of what’s at stake Saturday night in Las Vegas. 📸 @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

The Challenger: Keith Thurman (31-1, 23 KOs)

There was a time not long ago when Keith Thurman was the most exciting welterweight on the planet. He has wins over Shawn Porter and Danny Garcia on his résumé, and he held unified titles before injuries and inactivity began to derail things. His only professional loss came in a split decision to Manny Pacquiao back in 2019, and since that night he has fought just twice — a win over Mario Barrios in 2022 and a stoppage of Brock Jarvis last March.

Now 37, Thurman is moving up to 154 pounds to face a man who is bigger, younger, and has been significantly more active. It raises legitimate questions. But “One Time” still carries real weapons — exceptional hand speed, sharp combinations, a high boxing IQ, and the kind of ring savvy that only comes from fighting at the elite level for years.

LAS VEGAS — Nine world champions on his résumé. One more in his way Saturday night. 🥊 @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

Thurman also has more on the line than just a belt. He has been open about what a win here would mean for his legacy. “This will definitely solidify me as a Hall of Famer,” he said ahead of the fight. That motivation is real, and it should not be dismissed.


How This Fight Gets Won

Fundora’s path to victory is volume and pressure. He wants to close distance, control the center of the ring, and make Thurman uncomfortable by the middle rounds. His high punch output tends to accumulate damage even when opponents think they are keeping up. If his defense has tightened since the Mendoza loss, a stoppage is well within range.

Thurman’s path is more specific. He needs to use his footwork, avoid the ropes, and find clean counter opportunities before Fundora can get into a rhythm. If he can land hard early and earn respect, this becomes a different fight. His body work could also be a key factor over 12 rounds, breaking down Fundora from the inside out. The concern is whether the layoffs have dulled the timing that made him great.

The odds heavily favor Fundora at -380, with Thurman sitting at +280. Most analysts project a Fundora decision, though few are counting out a dramatic Thurman moment if the conditions are right.


Co-Main Event: Yoenis Tellez vs. Brian Mendoza

This one is genuinely compelling. Rising Cuban star Yoenis Tellez squares off against Brian Mendoza — the same Brian Mendoza who handed Fundora his only career loss. Both men come in as former interim champions in the super welterweight division, and both have knockout power. Tellez has been turning heads as one of the more exciting young fighters in the sport, and Mendoza brings the kind of credibility that makes this a legitimate measuring stick fight. Don’t skip this one.

LAS VEGAS — The PPV undercard is stacked in its own right. Tellez vs. Mendoza serves as the co-main, with Hernandez vs. Gausha and Hovhannisyan vs. Navarro rounding out a full night of action before Fundora and Thurman step in. 🥊 @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

PPV Undercard

Yoenli Hernandez vs. Terrell Gausha — Undefeated Cuban middleweight Hernandez has been one of the more quietly impressive prospects in the sport, and former U.S. Olympian Gausha is exactly the kind of credible test that separates the real ones from the pretenders. Hernandez has the tools — clean technique, good power, and the composure of a fighter who has been groomed for moments like this. Don’t sleep on this one.

Gurgen Hovhannisyan vs. Cesar Navarro — The PPV opener features an undefeated heavyweight slugger in Hovhannisyan who brings serious knockout power and comes to fight every time out. Navarro will need to be sharp from the opening bell. If Hovhannisyan gets comfortable early, this one could be short.


First on Prime — Free Prelims (2:30 PM PT)

Elijah Garcia vs. Kevin Newman II — 10 rounds, super middleweight. Garcia is one of the more promising young names in the division and headlines the free card. A great reason to tune in early.

Brayan Gonzalez vs. Brandon Guerrero — 6 rounds, featherweight. An undefeated prospect against a tough Mexican fighter — the kind of fight that can make a career.

Kaipo Gallegos vs. Julian Gonzalez — 10 rounds, lightweight. Rising teenage sensation Gallegos has been turning heads, and this is his biggest test yet against once-beaten Gonzalez.

LAS VEGAS — The First on Prime card kicks off Saturday at 2:30 PM PT on Prime Video — free for all viewers. Garcia vs. Newman II headlines a three-fight undercard before the PPV main event takes over. 🥊 @premierboxing | #FundoraThurman

How to Watch

First on Prime (Free) — Saturday, March 28 | 2:30 PM PT | Prime Video

Garcia vs. Newman II, Gonzalez vs. Guerrero, Gallegos vs. Gonzalez

PPV Main Card — Saturday, March 28 | 5:00 PM PT | PBC PPV on Prime Video

Hovhannisyan vs. Navarro → Hernandez vs. Gausha → Tellez vs. Mendoza → Fundora vs. Thurman (Main Event)

The PPV is also available through traditional cable, satellite providers and PPV.com.


Fight week is here. Saturday night in Las Vegas, Fundora looks to stamp his name on 154 pounds for good, and Thurman gets one more shot to remind the world why he was once the most feared welterweight alive. Boxing doesn’t always give us clean storylines, but this one comes close.

City Champs Media will have full coverage throughout fight week.

LAS VEGAS —-
LAS VEGAS — The Towering Inferno meets One Time — Las Vegas, March 28, Credit: Premier Boxing Champions (PBC)
@premierboxing

Fundora-Thurman Card Finalizes — And Gets a Last-Minute Shakeup

LAS VEGAS — The Towering Inferno meets One Time — Las Vegas, March 28, Credit: Premier Boxing Champions (PBC)

LAS VEGAS — With fight week nearly here, the full card for Sebastian Fundora vs. Keith Thurman has been set — and it comes with one notable change at the top of the undercard.

The main event remains the same: WBC Super Welterweight World Champion Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora (23-1-1, 15 KOs) puts his title on the line against former unified welterweight champion Keith “One Time” Thurman (31-1, 23 KOs) on Saturday, March 28 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, live on Prime Video Pay-Per-View.

LAS VEGAS — Fundora vs. Thurman — 2 weeks away. WBC Super Welterweight World Championship, Saturday March 28 | 8PM ET / 5PM PT on PBC PPV, Live on Prime Video. | Credit: @premierboxing

The Champion Up Close

When we first covered this fight back in February, Fundora was still building his reputation as one of the most physically imposing champions in the sport. Now heading into his third title defense, that reputation is no longer a question — it’s a fact.

At 6-foot-5½ with a reach to match, the 28-year-old southpaw from Coachella, California is a nightmare matchup for anyone at 154 pounds. He won the WBC title in a split decision upset over Tim Tszyu, then left no doubt in the rematch with a seventh-round TKO. His record of 23-1-1 with 15 knockouts speaks to a fighter who comes to finish, and while Thurman’s experience and power make this a legitimate challenge, Fundora enters as the clear favorite. As he himself has said, everyone underestimates him — and he’s made a habit of proving people wrong.


Don’t Count Thurman Out

While Fundora enters as the clear favorite, it would be a mistake to count Thurman out entirely. The 37-year-old has been in the fire before — his wars with Danny Garcia, Shawn Porter, and Manny Pacquiao were the kind of fights that defined an era at 147 pounds. Thurman knows how to weather pressure, find his spots, and dig deep when the moment demands it.

If there is one thing experience provides, it’s the ability to stay calm when things get uncomfortable. Fundora’s length and pressure will be a new test for him at 154, but if Thurman can get into a rhythm and land that right hand consistently, this fight has every ingredient to be a war rather than the one-sided affair some are predicting.


Co-Main Shakeup: Sanchez Out, Tellez-Mendoza Steps In

Frank Sanchez had to pull out of the IBF heavyweight title eliminator against Richard Torrez Jr. with an injury, removing what would have been the most high-profile undercard bout. Stepping in as the new co-feature is a compelling super welterweight showdown between Cuban rising star Yoenis Tellez (11-1, 8 KOs) and hard-hitting veteran Brian Mendoza (23-4, 17 KOs).

Both fighters share a near-identical profile — same height at 5’10”, elite knockout rates above 72%, and both former interim champions. Tellez however holds the edge in reach at 73” to Mendoza’s 70”, and at just 25 years old, he brings a youth advantage over the 32-year-old Mendoza. This is a fight between two fighters who finish. Combined they have 25 knockouts — making it a natural co-main on a card headlined by a championship bout in the same division.


The Rest of the Card

Undefeated top-rated middleweight Yoenli Hernandez and battle-tested U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha duel in a 10-round bout . Hernandez (9-0, 8 KOs) is one of the more exciting young prospects in boxing right now, and Gausha (24-5-1, 12 KOs) is the kind of experienced opponent who can expose a fighter — or help cement a rising star’s legitimacy.

Opening the PPV portion of the show is Elijah Garcia (17-1, 13 KOs), who makes his super middleweight debut against Kevin Newman II (18-3-1, 11 KOs) . Garcia is a 22-year-old from Arizona looking to make a definitive statement in a new division.

Rounding out the card, heavyweight prospect Gurgen Hovhannisyan (9-0, 8 KOs) will face Cesar Navarro (15-3, 13 KOs) in the opener.

LAS VEGAS — The Fundora-Thurman undercard lineup for March 28 at MGM Grand Garden Arena. | Credit: @premierboxing

What’s at Stake

The 154-pound division is stacked. Vergil Ortiz Jr., Jaron “Boots” Ennis, and a freshly unified Xander Zayas are all waiting in the wings. A Fundora win keeps his reign intact and opens the door to the biggest matchups of his career. A Thurman upset — and it would be one — rewrites the story of both fighters entirely.
Fight week is approaching. We’ll have more coverage as it unfolds.

LAS VEGAS — The size advantage is real — Fundora stands 6’5½” to Thurman’s 5’9½”. | Credit: @premierboxing