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TOPSHOT - Spain's Enmanuel Reyes Pla and Azerbaijan's Loren Berto Alfonso Dominguez (Blue) fight in the men's 92kg semi-final boxing match during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the North Paris Arena, in Villepinte on August 4, 2024. Photo by JEFF PACHOUD/AFP via Getty Images

Two fighters from the Yucatán Peninsula will step into the ring carrying a combined 37 professional wins and zero margin for error. The weigh-ins are done. The fights are real. And the stakes — for both men — could not be higher.

Guillermo Keb Canul (14-0) puts his perfect record on the line against James Bernadin (14-3), an experienced American fighter who has been in the professional game long enough to know exactly how to unravel a hot prospect. Keb Canul, from the town of Hunucmá, Yucatán, weighed in at 137.4 lbs; Bernadin came in at 139. This is Keb Canul's first time fighting outside Mexican territory. That is not a small detail.

Elías "Latin Kid" Espadas González (23-8) faces the more dangerous assignment: Weljon Mindoro, a Filipino fighter with a 16-0-1 record who has stopped every single one of his opponents. Every. Single. One. Espadas came in at 162.2 lbs, Mindoro at 162.6. The bout is at middleweight, and the math is unforgiving.

The Unbeaten and the Untested Road

Keb Canul's 14-0 record is the kind of number that generates buzz — and also skepticism. Unbeaten records built at home, in friendly venues, against regional opponents, have a way of collapsing the moment the fighter crosses a border. Bernadin's 14-3 résumé tells you he has been through wars and survived. His three losses mean he has been hit hard and kept going. That is the test Keb Canul hasn't faced yet.

What separates a good prospect from a real one is precisely this moment. Friday night, in Texas, we find out.

Espadas and the Man Who Doesn't Go to the Cards

Elías Espadas has been a professional since 2012 and has faced fighters of the caliber of Xander Zayas and Callum Walsh. He has absorbed losses and come back. His 16 knockouts in 32 fights — a 69% KO rate — tell you he was never a fighter who wanted to leave things to the judges.

Mindoro, however, is a different kind of problem. Every one of his wins has come by stoppage. He doesn't coast to decisions; he ends fights. Espadas has faced power punchers before and survived. Whether he survives this one is the question that makes this bout worth watching.

"We worked to fight and beat anyone," Espadas said at the weigh-in. Short answer. Clean answer.

Where These Men Come From

The town of Hunucmá has already given professional boxing one world champion: Gilberto "Baby Luis V" Keb Baas, who won the WBC Light Flyweight title in 2010 in a majority decision that shocked the division. The surname Keb is not a coincidence in Yucatecan boxing — it carries history.

Mérida, the state capital, has produced a lineage almost without parallel in Mexican boxing for its size. Freddy "Chato Loco" Castillo, born in Mérida in 1955, became a two-division world champion, holding the WBC light flyweight title in 1978 and the WBC flyweight title in 1982. Juan "Juanito" Herrera, also from Mérida, held the WBA flyweight title in 1981–82. The Espadas family name runs even deeper: Guty Espadas Sr., the WBA flyweight champion, and his son Guty Espadas Jr., WBC featherweight champion in 2000, made Mérida a dynasty address in world boxing.

And above them all: Miguel "El Maestro" Canto, who died on April 16, 2026 at age 78, just weeks before this Arlington card was announced. Canto — an International Boxing Hall of Famer — won the WBC flyweight title in January 1975 by traveling to Japan and beating Shoji Oguma on his home soil, then defended it 14 consecutive times before losing it in 1979. He was the first Yucatecan to win a professional world boxing championship, and in the months since his death, Yucatán has been reminded of what that lineage means.

Keb Canul and Espadas step into that context Friday night. Not in Mérida. In Texas. On the road. Against opponents who want to win.

That's when it counts.

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