Épisodes

  • From Mayweather Gym To Zuffa: How An 100-Fight Amateur Became A Pro Problem
    Jan 28 2026

    A phone call with a rising contender turns into a masterclass on how to build a career the right way. Robert Merriweather III opens up about the Zuffa signing, the full camp behind his latest win, and the viral moment that had a mouthpiece flying while he stayed locked in. From early days roaming the Mayweather gym to a 100-fight amateur slate, he explains how timing, patience, and ring IQ became his edge—and why composure under bright lights isn’t an accident.

    We dig into the details fans care about: how far out he knew about the fight, what a real pro camp looks like at his age, and the habits he picked up watching elite preparation up close. He talks through the mechanics of his style—clean head movement, sharp entries, selective volume—and why his Philly roll is more than a look. It’s integrated with footwork, counter triggers, and the kind of defensive awareness that keeps offense alive. If you’ve wondered what separates a highlight from a skill set that scales, this conversation lays it out.

    Looking ahead, he’s eyeing March for the next date, with names like Curmel Moton in the mix and a long-term vision that points toward champions such as O’Shaquie Foster. We explore the dynamics of fighting friends, managing expectations, and staying grounded when opportunities arrive fast. The throughline is simple: preparation meets opportunity, and the work shows. If you love smart pressure, calm execution, and prospects with real ceilings, you’ll want to follow Robert’s next move.

    If this conversation hits your boxing brain the way it hit ours, subscribe, share with a fight friend, and leave a quick review telling us who you want to see Merriweather face next.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    8 min
  • From East St. Louis To The Ring
    Jan 22 2026

    A train ride out of East St. Louis becomes the first step in a fighter’s rebirth. Trevion Boyd arrives in Albuquerque with little more than a blessing from his grandmother and the grit to start over. What he finds is a gym that takes pain off his shoulders and replaces it with focus, a team that raises his ceiling, and a path that turns a rough past into measurable wins—two New Mexico Golden Gloves titles and a growing presence at national tournaments.

    We dive into the moments that shaped him: the charge that derailed school, the judge who recognized a change of heart, the first amateur loss to a friend that became a blueprint for growth. Trevion opens up about judging politics in amateur boxing and the only answer that matters—execute so clearly that scorecards don’t decide your fate. He breaks down the Tulsa stoppage, the cost of not listening to your corner, and the mindset reset that now guides his prep for Colorado. Along the way, he talks about building with a respected Albuquerque coach, training around winners, and embracing the competitive pressure that forges pros.

    Threaded through it all is faith and family. His grandmother, Sandra Denise Johnson Byrd, remains the voice in his head and the standard he measures against. He wants a pro career not just for belts and lights, but to give back—choosing community over flash, purpose over hype, legacy over likes. We also trade takes on Shakur Stevenson and Teofimo Lopez, the surge of young talent, and what staying relevant really demands in modern boxing. If you’re chasing your own pivot—out of chaos, toward clarity—this story is fuel.

    If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a spark, and leave a quick review. Your support helps more people find stories that fight for something real.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    17 min
  • He Chose Pink Hair So You’d Remember The Punch
    Jan 21 2026

    Jayden Utarro, a teenager with pink hair won Golden Gloves in his very first boxing match and hasn’t lifted his foot off the gas since. We sit down for a candid look at how bullying sparked a turn to self-defense, how early kickboxing wins and losses shaped his composure, and why a shock debut victory became the fuel for an unforgiving training routine that starts before dawn. This is a story about ownership: of time, of identity, and of what it takes to stand out without losing yourself.

    We get into the nuts and bolts of his schedule: 2 a.m. alarms, strength and conditioning before most alarms ring, fast two-mile efforts that sharpen pace, and midweek sparring sessions where visiting hitters bring fresh looks. He breaks down how switching gyms gave him a multi-coach team with distinct roles, why footwork days are as valuable as heavy bag days, and how open-invite sparring keeps the ego in check. He also shares how his mom stepped into matchmaking, how teammates push him past his limits, and how sponsors help keep the lights on when travel and gear stack up.

    Identity and ambition run through every minute. The Pink Panther look isn’t a gimmick; it’s a flag you can see from the cheap seats. He talks about wearing local merch, choosing pink because no one else did, and staying open to causes that matter. We trade takes on favorite fighters like Sean O’Malley and Ryan Garcia, then wade into the sanctioning debate around Terence Crawford and what makes a champion beyond belts. School is online, college is a maybe, and the only certainty is the next round. If he could pick any spar, he’d choose Crawford, because the fastest way to learn is to step where the air is thin.

    If stories of grit, routine, and clear-eyed ambition move you, this one lands. Hit follow, share it with a friend who loves combat sports, and leave a review telling us which fighter you’d choose for a dream spar and why.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    16 min
  • How daddy told me I was going to be the next Barbara Walters
    Jan 16 2026

    A little side note to the audience

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    3 min
  • From “The Bank” To World Title Dreams: Troy Nash
    Jan 15 2026

    Some prospects talk about becoming champion; others live like it before the belt arrives. We sit down with a featherweight phenom called “The Bank,” whose nickname was minted in a bet-fueled tournament moment and whose mindset shows why people keep wagering on him. Fifteen national titles and a countrywide buzz are the backdrop, but the mission is singular: world champion or bust.

    The story winds through a turbulent first year as a pro—scheduling chaos, late pullouts, stalled momentum—and the strategic reset that followed. He explains how aligning with the right company solved the brittle parts of his schedule and why patience beat quick deals. Then the tape study begins. We break down the craft: how a live jab and disciplined feints control range, why he can flip to inside pressure when needed, and where that adaptability comes from. It’s a masterclass in ring IQ, not theory, backed by rounds with Shakur Stevenson, Keyshawn Davis, and years training around Terence “Bud” Crawford’s camp.

    One pivotal thread: the Grand Prix draw. At first it felt like a loss because it ended the run, but a hard look at the conditions—last-minute travel, a tough cut, a seasoned opponent, and judges slogging through sixteen fights—shifted the meaning. He now treats it as earned experience and proof he can handle chaos against older, deeper pros. From family coaching roots—with his grandfather, father, and uncle shaping different chapters—to altitude camps in Colorado, focused work in Vegas, and a mini-camp in New Mexico, his path reads like a blueprint for sustainable growth.

    He lays out what’s ahead: four to five fights this year, a calculated path at featherweight, and a promotional announcement he believes will turn heads. The motto stays simple—kill when you hunt—because when opportunity opens, hesitation costs. If you’ve been waiting for a prospect who pairs poise with pressure and skills with substance, this conversation is your scouting report. Listen, subscribe, and leave a review to tell us who you want “The Bank” to face next.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    15 min
  • Barboza’s Back, He Never Left Though ✝️
    Jan 15 2026

    A fighter can chase an image or chase the truth. Arnold Barboza Jr. chooses the truth—about risk, loss, faith, and the weight class that fits who he is now. From stepping into a gym at five and a half to sharing cards with his pro kickboxer father, his foundation was built in real reps: smoker bouts, 75 amateur fights, and a career defined by taking chances instead of protecting a spotless record.

    We talk through that nine-month sprint against three top-five opponents, the sting and lessons from the Lopez loss, and the decision to move up to 147 to unlock health, strength, and timing. Arnold opens up about how he and his dad keep their bond strong by drawing a hard line between trainer and father—strict in the gym, warm at home. He extends that wisdom to his own son, choosing a dedicated amateur program over trying to coach him himself, prioritizing learning, joy, and longevity.

    Faith anchors the comeback. Arnold describes a dark season that shifted when he turned to God—daily prayer, renewed habits, and a calmer approach to career delays and near-miss negotiations, including a Ryan fight that fell apart over a rematch clause. The theme is resilience through clarity: build on fundamentals, respect your body, honor your people, and trust timing enough to make the next shot your best one. If you’ve ever had to rebuild after a hard hit—on the canvas or in life—this conversation offers practical wisdom and honest hope.

    Listen, subscribe, and share with someone who needs a measured, fearless blueprint for a comeback. If the story resonates, leave a review and tell us the toughest adjustment you’ve made to get better.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    22 min
  • From Golden Gloves To Going Pro
    Jan 14 2026

    The gloves came on long before the spotlight. Growing up in Las Vegas, New Mexico, Kaleb Medina learned to turn raw emotion into focused work, guided by a father, grandfather, and uncle who lived the sport. That lineage runs through every story he tells, from childhood shadowboxing to collecting 70-plus amateur bouts and navigating a pandemic pause before landing in Albuquerque’s tight-knit boxing community.

    We get into the nuts and bolts of a Golden Gloves win at 143, why moving up from 132 made sense, and how amateur tournaments punish the undisciplined with daily weigh-ins. He breaks down conditioning that actually translates, especially sprint work that builds second and third winds when fights get gritty. With one last international tournament ahead, he looks toward the pro ranks at 130, backed by coaches who emphasize smart matchmaking, real development, and accountability. He has no time for padded records or triangle theories; styles make fights, and respect is earned the hard way, round after round.

    There’s a studied eye behind the swagger. He analyzes recent pro action with detail—dropped hands, tempo shifts, broadcast bias—and names current favorites like Bam Rodriguez, Nakatani, and Benavidez for their blend of craft and aggression. Beneath it all sits a steady faith shaped by family and fortified through hard years, the kind that turns road work into ritual and setbacks into fuel. If you’ve ever wanted to step into a boxing gym but hesitated, you’ll find practical advice and an open door here: start with the bag, build the habit, and let the confidence follow.

    Subscribe for more conversations with rising prospects and seasoned champions, share this with a friend who loves boxing, and leave a review to help others find the show. Which topic should we dive deeper into next—weight cuts, sparring, or turning pro? Let us know.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    23 min
  • From Albuquerque To Ambition: A Young Boxer's Road To Pro And Olympic Dreams
    Jan 13 2026

    What does it take to chase the Olympics when you started late and the odds say slow down? We bring you a candid, high-energy conversation with a 20-year-old Albuquerque fighter named Santiago Saavedra in his first official year of boxing, sitting at 2–2 and aiming boldly at the open division, national tournaments, and the Olympic trials. Guided by faith, family, and a father who doubles as coach, he lays out the habits that turn raw hunger into a plan: six training days a week, a goal book split between short-term wins and long-shot dreams, and a mantra he repeats when doubt creeps in.

    We dig into the technical side that separates a brawler from a boxer’s boxer. He explains why footwork is his signature, how to frustrate pressure with the jab and angles, and when to switch sparring from touch work to fight pace. You’ll hear about three hard rounds at Top Rank in Las Vegas, what he learned when an opponent simply wanted to trade, and how amateurs win bouts by pairing movement with clean scoring. He’s honest about setbacks, transparent about his 2–2 start, and clear about the mission: stack experience, learn fast, and compete at 132 when it matters most.

    Weight cuts, mindset, and community pride round out the story. He shares why he prefers old-school dieting over sauna suits, what foods he dreams about during camp, and how family support grew as his results did. There’s hometown fire here, too—keeping Albuquerque on the map, showing love to underrated New Mexico talent, and drawing inspiration from names like Johnny Tapia and Danny Romero. If you’re building something from the ground up—late start or not—you’ll walk away with practical training insights, a sharper view of the Olympic path, and a reminder that self-belief is a skill you can train.

    If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a push, and drop a review to help more fight fans find us.

    The Boxing Grind

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    20 min