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Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. fight results, highlights, analysis

Jake Paul beat Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. by unanimous decision Saturday night, in a victory Paul had predicted and said would be the next step in his pursuit of a world title.

Paul dominated the first eight rounds before Chavez came alive in the final two rounds of the 10-round cruiserweight fight at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California.

Chavez caught Paul’s attention with left hooks and a right, but Paul simply fought back. And Chavez clearly needed a knockout after looking inept for more than half of the fight.

The judges scored it 99-91, 97-93, 98-92 in favor of Paul.

Paul, 28, improved to 12-1.

The crowd booed after Paul was declared the winner. During an in-ring interview, Paul said he “loved’’ the crowd’s response but responded with profanity.

Paul said he wasn’t disappointed he couldn’t knock out Chavez. In fact, he didn’t even knock him down.

“He’s a tough, tough guy,’’ Paul said. “He’s never been stopped. And he’s a Mexican warrior.

“I respect Mexican warriors. I respect Mexico. But I’m also a warrior and I came out on top tonight.’’

Paul said he plans to fight again this year.

“I want tougher fighters,’’ he said. “I want to be world champion.’’

Chavez, 39, had indicated he would retire if he lost to Paul, and the defeat reinforced his reputation as a boxer past his prime. The son of legendary Mexican boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., he has lost five of his last nine fights and his record dropped to 54-7-1.

Chavez said he thought Paul was “a strong, good boxer’’ for the first three or four rounds of the fight, then tired.

“So I don’t think he’s ready for the champions,’’ Chavez said. “But he’s a good fighter.”

Paul, who embarked on a pro boxing career in 2020, won his sixth straight fight since suffering his lone defeat. That loss came against Tommy Fury by split decision in 2023.

Entering his fight against Chavez Jr., Paul was coming off a victory over Mike Tyson by unanimous decision in November.

USA TODAY Sports has you covered with updates, analysis and highlights from the Paul-Chavez Jr. card here:

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

Round 10: Up go the chants. “Julio! Julio!’’ Chavez advancing again and digs in with a left hook. Paul responds. Paul lands a sharp, short right. Time’s running out on Chavez. Now he’s letting the punches fly. A left and a right. But nothing lands solid and Paul fights back. Chavez lands a solid left and eats punches as he looks for one more. Lands a hard right and a jab. Is there a miracle here waiting to happen? Chavez and Paul exchange big punches, including a Chavez left at the bell. But, no miracle. Paul 99, Chavez 91. 

Round 9: Chavez lands a right but draws a warning from the referee about low blows. Chavez whips a right into Paul’s head but there’s no follow up. Paul quickly responds. Chavez advances, though, and throws a couple of rights off the mark. But he lands a left to the body and then a right. Two more body shots from Chavez, who then eats a flurry of punches. Chavez comes back with a right and a big uppercut. Crowd on its feet. And Chavez lands a big left. The crowd roars as the round ends. Paul 90, Chavez 81.

Round 8: Chavez is going to need a knockout to win this. Unless Paul pulls the craziest “No Mas’’ in boxing history. Paul throws a couple of jabs. Chavez fires back with one of his own. Chavez throws a hard left but it misses. Doesn’t look like there’s much in Chavez’s tank, or a willingness to open up. Chavez throwing an occasionally left, but nothing to slow Paul from throwing combinations. Chavez lands a couple of nice shots – one to the body and one to the head – and Paul fires back. Paul 80, Chavez 72.

Round 7: Paul out with authority, and attacks Chavez’s body. Chavez moves forward and threw a right that glanced off Paul’s head. They’re tied up now. Chavez absorbing lots of punches, but comes forward again as he digs a left into Paul’s body. Paul scores with an uppercut. They’re tied up again and look fatigued. Looks like they’d like to slow dance for the last 30 seconds of the round. But the referee separates them. Briefly. Paul 70, Chavez 63.

Round 6: Paul throws an uppercut that squeezes through the high guard. He lands another hard uppercut and Chavez advances. Chavez landa a body blow – but it’s one and done for him. But then he lands a left hook. It’s a stinging shot that caught Paul’s attention. In fact, Paul leaned on Chavez as if to catch his breath. Chavez coming alive as Paul unloads. Paul 60, Chavez 54.

Round 5: Paul comes out firing the jab again. Chavez backs into his defensive mode. But now he comes forward and throws a right. There is life in this man. But Paul looks unaffected and continues to throw and land punches. Chavez appears to have caught Paul below the belt, but the fight quickly resumes. Still so striking how much stronger Paul looks. Maybe that’s why Chavez is spending most of his time covering up. Chavez advancing now, but misses with a right before eating one. Paul 50, Chavez 45.

Round 4: Paul comes out quick with an overhand right. Follows it up with a left. Paul scoring with both hands and Chavez has turned inactive again. Paul lands body shots. Chavez whiffs with a right and eats a right from Paul. Now he moves forward, lands a left to the body and looks angry. Paul counters with a right. Chavez digs in to Paul’s body with another left and may be coming to life? Chavez now advancing and lands a right. They exchanges jabs as the round comes to a close. Paul 40, Chavez 36.

Round 3: Chavez emerges for the round without a white flag. But he doesn’t look much more interested in fighting. He takes a hard right to the body. Paul scores again to the body. Chavez complaining that Paul was hitting him in the back of the head. Chavez, meanwhile, does not look inclined to hit Paul at all. In the crowd, Chavez’s father, the legendary fighter, looks frustrated. Now he’s on his feet urging his son to punch. Chavez finally lands a SOLID left to Paul’s face. Almost shocking. Paul 30, Chavez 27.

Round 2: Paul comes out firing the jab. Chavez has his hands up and looks futile. He throws a weak jab. Paul stifles laughter? Referee calls for time and asks for Vaseline be removed from Paul’s face. That doesn’t see to help Chavez. Paul lands a left, but not with authority. Chavez looks like he’s forgotten how to box, almost inept as Mike Tyson looked in November. Chavez finally lands a right, to Paul’s body. Whoopee. Paul lands a combination  and Chavez is backpedaling again. Paul 20, Chavez 18.

Round 1: It’s on – Jake Paul and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., who by prefight applause is clearly the crowd favorite at the Honda Center. Paul clearly the bigger and more muscled fighter. They hustle to the center of the ring. Chavez has the high guard in place as the fighters circle. Chavez throws a weak wide right. Paul fires at Chavez’s body, then Chavez responds with a jab. Paul looks more comfortable and throws punches with both hands. Chavez is not exuding confidence. Paul stalking and throws a big right. Chavez looks concerned and isn’t throwing punches. Chavez whiffs with a left. Paul lands a right on the top of Chavez’s head and he complains. Rather than fighting back. Paul 10, Chavez 9. 

Jake Paul boxing record

Paul is 11-1 – better than virtually everyone expected when the YouTuber embarked on his pro boxing career in 2020. He has knocked out seven of his opponents.

Jake Paul net worth is…substantial

Jake Paul’s net worth was $100 million in January 2025, according to Celebrity Net Worth. Paul said he made $40 million from his fight against Mike Tyson in November.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. vs. Canelo Alvarez

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and Canelo Alvarez squared off in 2017. Alvarez dominated the 12-round super middleweight fight and won by unanimous decision, 120-108, 120-108, 120-108.

Jake Paul has tried to get a shot at Alvarez but negotiations fell through in February.

How old is Jake Paul?

Jake Paul is 28. His opponent, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., is 39.

Gilberto Ramirez def. Yuniel Dorticos by unanimous decision

Ramirez defended his WBO and WBA cruiserweight world title with a unanimous decision in the 12-round fight.

The so-called “KO Doctor,’’ Dorticos landed some hard blows. He also landed an excessive number of low blows and for that the referee deducted a point. 

By contrast, Ramirez landed crisp and clean blows – above the belt — and for that he was rewarded on the scorecards.

The three judges scored it 115-112, 115-112, 117-110 for Ramirez, the 34-year-old Mexican who improved his record to 48-1.

Dorticos, a 39-year-old Cuban, fell to 27-3.

Gilberto Ramirez vs. Yuniel Dorticos, cruiserweight, 12 rounds 

Round 12: Dorticos digging into the body, and Ramirez responds with those softer but crisper punches. He lands a hard left while scoring with a series of punches. Ramirez showing precision and Dorticos somehow keeping his punches above the belt. Ramirez 115, Dorticos 112.

Round 11: Dorticos is warned about low blows yet again but doesn’t deduct a point. Dorticos throws what appears to be another low blow, but Ramirez keeps firing – above the belt. Ramirez slips again. Was the boxing ring built on an ice rink? Dorticos has Ramirez against the ropes and is letting his punches fly. Ramirez 105, Dorticos 103.

Round 10: Dorticos showing some of the same power he showed in the early rounds. But Ramirez looks unfazed – that is, until Dorticos hits him with three straight low blows. This time the referee deducts a point. Dorticos still throwing low blows, almost begging the referee to deduct another point. Ramirez stays focused on pummeling Dorticos. Ramirez 96, Dorticos 93. 

Round 9: Dorticos showing more energy, but Ramirez is the cleaner, crisper puncher now. Dorticos lands an uppercut, but Ramirez continues to move forward and unload. Ramirez’s punches gaining power as he connects with the body and head. Ramirez almost slips and falls, and he eats a straight left. But he looks poised as the round ends. Ramirez 86, Dorticos 85.

Round 8: Ramirez moving forward, but Dorticos stands his ground. They’re grappling now. Ramirez looks content to continue the inside fighting and is landing shots. Dorticos revs it up but Ramirez answers with a flurry. Dorticos 76, Ramirez 76.

Round 7: Dorticos comes out firing the left. Ramirez works the body again and lands a left uppercut, followed by a nice combination. Now they’re trading blows in close quarters, and Ramirez lands a hard left. Ramirez finishes strong. Dorticos 67, Ramirez 66.

Round 6: Round opens with some pattycake. Power surging now. Dorticos lands a couple of hard lefts and rips an uppercut that may have snuck through Ramirez’s high guard. Ramirez fights back with a head-snapping left. The round ends with a decent exchange. Dorticos 58, Ramirez 56.

Round 5: Action slows, and Ramirez finally moving forward. He pokes at Dorticos’ body and then lands a left to the face. Ramirez showing more precision with his punches. They exchange big shots before Ramirez scores with a combination. Ramirez showing more movement and dodges a couple of big punches. Dorticos 48, Ramirez 47.

Round 4: Dorticos unloads early and remains the aggressor. Ramirez scores to the body, but it’s unclear if it’s with enough force to make a difference. Dortico connects with two clean shots to the tone of Ramirez’s head. Follows up with a nice left. Ramirez fights back but Dorticos is getting the best of this as he backs Ramirez against he ropes. Dorticos 39, Ramirez 37.

Round 3: Ramirez scores to the body as the two circle at the center of the ring. Ramirez throws a combination that lacks fire. But he connects to the body. Ramirez lands shot and Dorticos quickly counters. Dorticos is warned for low blows for the second time, then finishes with a flurry. Dorticos 29, Ramirez 28.

Round 2: Dorticos showing more aggression, throws a few hard rights. Ramirez responds with precise punches that lack power. Dorticos stalking and lands a left. Dorticos clearly the aggressor now and he lands a couple of uppercuts. Ramirez pocking at Dorticos’ body while Dorticos fires hard shots. Ramirez 19, Dorticos 19. 

Round 1: Gilberto Ramirez and Yuniel Dorticos heads toward the center of the ring with Ramirez’s WBO and WBA world titles on the line. Ramirez opens with a right that misses, then follows up with one that lands. He fires two lefts at Dorticos’ midsection. Then connects with a right to Dorticos’ chin. No KO power yet, but he’s connecting. Dorticos finally opens up with a couple of wide rights. Nothing to write home about, but enough to live blog about. Ramirez 10, Dorticos 9.

Jake Paul’s brother makes prediction

Logan Paul, Jake’s older brother, has arrived and made a prediction about the fight. At some point, he said, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. will get knocked down, realize Jake Paul hits harder than he expected and have to make a decision.

Get up? Or stay on the canvas?

“I think he’s going to quit,’’ Logan Paul said of Chavez on DAZN’s livestream. “I don’t think he’s got the fight in him.’’

Raul Curiel def. Victor Rodriguez by TKO

With the fight unexpectedly close in the fourth round, Curiel abruptly ended it.

He throttled Rodriguez with a body shot and uppercut that knocked Rodriguez to the canvas, left a nasty gash under Rodriguez’s eye and all but ended the welterweight fight.

Rodriguez got to his feet, but Curiel quickly smothered him and the referee waved off the fight at 2:01 of the fourth round.

Curiel, the 29-year-old from Mexico, improved to 16-0-1. Rodriguez, a 29-year-old from Uruguay, fell to 16-1-1.

Raul Curiel vs. Victor Ezequiel Rodriguez, welterweight, 10 rounds

Round 4: Curiel comes out strong, but Rodriguez stands his ground. More exchanges at the center of the ring. Curiel clearly the more polished fighter. And with power! Down goes Rodriguez! He’s bleeding under his right eye as he reaches his feet and the fight resumes. Curiel pounding away on Rodriguez and the referee calls off the fight! It’s Curiel by TKO. 

Round 3: Rodriguez connects with a solid right during a flurry. Curiel responds with an uppercut. Curiel still proving to be the more elusive fighter and landing cleaner shots. But Rodriguez unloads and occasionally catches Curiel. Rodriguez may have muscled his way to winning that round. Curiel 29, Rodriguez 28.

Round 2: Fighters exchanging punches almost as soon as the round starts. No measuring here. Just letting the punches go. Rodriguez connects hard with two body punches, and Curiel responds with a combination that includes a nice uppercut. Curiel evading punches, then scores with counterpunches. Curiel 20, Rodriguez 18.  

Round 1: Raul Curiel and Victor Ezequiel Rodriguez, both unbeaten boxers, make their way to the center of the ring. The fighters are exchanging crisp jabs. Then Curiel starts to work the body. He looks like the quicker fighter, but Rodriguez turns aggressive and Curiel backs away. Temporarily. Rodriguez throws some solid rights, then digs into Curiel’s body with lefts. Curiel fights back, lands a combination. Curiel scores late. Curiel 10, Rodriguez 9.

Julian Rodriguez def. Avious Griffin by KO

With the fight potentially coming down to the judges’ scorecards in the 10th and final round, Rodriguez took matters into his hands.

Both hands.

He caught Griffin with a left, followed with a right to the body and drilled him with two more lefts that knocked him him down – and out.

DAZN later reported that two of the three judges had the fight tied, 85-85, on their scorecards entering the 10th round of the welterweight fight.

Rodriguez, 30, improved to 24-1. Griffin, 31, suffered his first loss and fell to 17-1.

Avious Griffin vs. Julian Rodriguez, welterweight, 10 rounds

Round 10: Neither fighter taking chances early. They trade lefts and Rodriguez gets inside, where slugging ensues. Griffin lands a right and Rodriguez ties him up. Rodriguez on the run but countering Griffin. Rodriguez lands a flurry and then knocks down Griffin!  Griffin staggers as he attempts to reach his feet and Griffin wins by knockout!!

Round 9: Griffin comes out oddly inactive after that brawling Round 8. Rodriguez hurts Griffin with a flurry! Rodriguez draws blood from Griffin’s nose, but Griffin fights back behind the jab. Misses with a big right, but scores with one later. Griffin 85, Rodriguez 85. 

Round 8: Griffin lands punches early, and some big ones! Down goes Rodriguez after getting hit with a left!  But he’s up and the fight resumes. And so does Griffin’s outburst. Griffin showing his vaunted power before Rodriguez fights back and lands a couple of solid punches, only to eat an uppercut. Both fighters look fatigued, but Griffin lands a couple of punches as the round. Griffin 76, Rodriguez 75.

Round 7: Griffin flicking jabs. That’s not going to get it done. Rodriguez darts in and scores with another big left. He’s showing the ability to duck down, close the gap and score. Griffin lands a solid right. Rodriguez 67, Griffin 66.

Round 6: Rodriguez looks increasingly comfortable working with the size disadvantages, darting inside when he finds an opening. Griffin still snapping jabs but with little impact. Rodriguez scores with two big lefts. And another. Then he evades some heavy punches from Griffin. Griffin 57, Rodriguez 57.

Round 5: Rodriguez opens with a solid combination. Rodriguez muscles into the corner and tags Griffin, then digs into the body. Griffin lands a lanky left and Rodriguez looks in control as the round comes to an end. Griffin 48, Rodriguez 47.

Round 4: Rodriguez clubs Griffin with a right. Griffin fights back. Griffin initiates an action, but Rodriguez fires back. Griffin lands a big right and Rodriguez looks unsteady. Griffin 39, Rodriguez 37.

Round 3: Rodriguez scores with a forceful jab. Griffin responds with a jab with far less snap. The crowd boos, because that’s what this crowd does best. Griffin lands two solid lefts. But Griffin lands a left that stuns Griffin. But Rodriguez a little tentative rather than seizing the moment, and the round ends with Rodriguez backpedaling. Griffin 29, Rodriguez 28.

Round 2: The boos surface early as the boxers measure each other. Griffin’s jab is not enough to excite the fans. Rodriguez lands a solid right and sends Griffin backpedaling. Action stalls again, boos resurface. Rodriguez charges in late and scores. Griffin 19, Rodriguez 19.

Round 1: The 6-foot Avious Griffin has a clear size advantage over the 5-9 Julian Rodriguez as they meet near at the center of the ring. But Rodriguez showing impressive quickness. Griffin scoring with the jab and that reach advantage is obvious, too. Crowd growing restless during a fairly inactive round. Griffin 10, Rodriguez 9. 

Floyd Schofield def. Tevin Farmer by TKO

Schofield wept after beating Farmer by first-round TKO in their lightweight fight and indicated the emotion stemmed from controversy.

In February, Schofield was accused of ducking Shakur Stevenson in February when he withdrew the week of their fight with an undisclosed illness.

But now the talk will be how he dismantled Farmer, a formidable 34-year-old veteran, while improving his record to 19-0.

Schofield, 22, knocked Farmer down twice and was smothering Farmer again when the referee waved off the fight at 1:18 of the first round.

Farmer’s record dropped to 33-9-1.

Floyd Schofield vs. Tevin Farmer, lightweight, 10 rounds

Round 1: Tevin Farmer throwing punches early, but nothing landing. Whoa! Down goes Farmer, dropped by Floyd Schofield’s right. Farmer goes down again!!! This time Farmer was floored by a combination. Schofield drills Farmer again and the fight’s over! The referee waves it off! Schofield wins by TKO. And a disoriented Farmer is bleeding from the mouth.

Holly Holm def. Yolanda Vega by unanimous decision

Holm, a boxing Hall of Famer and former UFC champion, made a successful return to the ring more than 12 years after her last pro boxing match.

Holm, 43, outpunched and outworked Vega, 30, in what the judges saw as a lopsided 10-round women’s lightweight bout.

All three judges scored the fight 100-90 in favor of Holm, who improved 34-2-3.

It was Vega’s first career defeat as her record dropped to 10-0. But she landed some solid punches, evidenced by Holm’s bloody nose.

“It was a great fight tonight,’’ Holm said. “…I was glad to be up against somebody that’s tough and put my skills to the test and see how it feels again.’’

Holm said she plans to box again. Laughing, she said people have been telling her to retire since 2012.

How tall is Jake Paul?

Jake Paul is 6-1, and interestingly, he’ll be looking Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. eye to eye. That’s right, Chavez also is 6-1.

Jake Paul vs. Chavez Jr. common opponent

Both Chavez and Paul have stepped inside the boxing ring with Anderson Silva, the legendary MMA fighter.

Chavez faced him in 2021, when Silva had only two pro boxing matches. Chavez came into the bout 2.4 pounds over the maximum weight of 182 pounds, forfeited $100,000 of his purse to Silva as a result and then lost the eight-round fight by split decision.

In 2022, Paul got his shot against Silva, then 2-2 as a pro boxer. Paul knocked him down in the eighth round, the final round of their fight, and won the bout by unanimous decision. Paul out-landed Silva in total punches, 83-79, and Silva out-landed Paul in power punches, 66-51.

Who did Jake Paul lose to?

Paul has won five fights in a row since his lone defeat – a loss to Tommy Fury by split decision in 2023. Paul scored the only knockdown of that eight-found bout, but Fury still prevailed on the scorecards, 76-73, 74-75, 76-73. 

Jake Paul in another gigantic fight for ages

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. will become the seventh of Paul’s 11 opponents who at least 10 years older than Paul, 28, at the time of their fight. (Tyron Woodley, who fought Paul twice, was 39 during each of those bouts.) Paul was eight years younger than two other opponents.

Jake Paul promises more than KO

Earlier this week, Jake Paul predicted he’ll knock out Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in the first round. Today he promised something else.

“I’m taking his soul tonight,” Paul wrote on X.

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.: Time, PPV, streaming for fight

The highly anticipated bout between Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. will take place on Saturday, June 28 and can be watched on DAZN Pay-Per-View.

  • Date: Saturday, June 27, 2025
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET
  • Location: Anaheim, Calif.
  • PPV: DAZN

Watch Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. with DAZN

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. main card, ring walk start times

  • Main card start time: 8 p.m. ET
  • Main event ring walks: 11 p.m. ET (approximate)

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. fight card

Main card

Fight card according to DAZN.

  • Jake Paul vs Julio César Chávez Jr.; Cruiserweight
  • Gilberto ‘Zurdo’ Ramirez vs Yuniel Dorticos; Cruiserweight, for the WBA and WBO titles
  • Raul ‘Cugar’ Curiel vs Victor Ezequiel Rodriguez;Welterweight
  • Avious Griffin vs Julian Rodriguez; Welterweight
  • Floyd Schofield vs Tevin Farmer; Lightweight

Prelims

According to Yahoo! Sports.

  • Women’s lightweight: Holly Holm vs. Yolanda Guadalupe Vega Ochoa
  • Welterweight: Joel Iriarte vs. Kevin Johnson
  • Light flyweight: Naomy Valle vs. Ashley Felix
  • Heavyweight: Joshua Edwards vs. Dominic Hardy
  • Bantamweight: Alexander Gueche vs. Vincent Avina
  • Super featherweight: Victor Morales vs. Rene Alvarado
  • Super flyweight: John Ramirez vs. Josue Jesus Morales

Jake Paul fight results: Prelim bouts

Here is how the preliminary fights have gone before the main card.

  • Bantamweight: Alexander Gueche defeats Vincent Avina by unanimous decision (80-72, 80-72, 79-73)
  • Heavyweight: Joshua Edwards defeats Dominic Hardy by knockout
  • Super featherweight: Rene Alvarado defeats Victor Morales by unanimous decision (96-94, 99-91, 99-91)
  • Super flyweight: John Ramirez defeats Josue Jesus Morales by unanimous decision (79-73, 80-72, 80-72)
  • Welterweight: Joel Iriarte defeated Kevin Johnson by unanimous decision, 78-74, 80-72, 79-74

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. fight odds

All odds are for moneyline bets as of Thursday, according to BetMGM.

  • Paul (-700)
  • Tie (+1600)
  • Chavez Jr. (+400)

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Predictions

Josh Peter, USA Today: Paul by TKO

Jake Paul vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.: At 39, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. is well past his prime. At 28, Jake Paul is approaching his prime. Thanks to youth and a powerful right hand, Paul will prevail. Prediction: Jake Paul by TKO, Round 9.  

Jon Hoefling, USA Today: Paul by decision

Considering Paul could not knock out a 58-year-old Mike Tyson, a matchup against someone in likely better shape and closer to his prime than Tyson shouldn’t result in anything greater. Paul is younger, faster, has been active more recently, and his strength is nothing to scoff at, but it seems way more likely that Paul and Chavez will go the distance than anything else.

C. Jackson Cowart, Sportsbook Review: Paul by mid-to-late decision, possibly TKO

Cowart writes, ‘Youth, power, reach, and recent consistent performance give Paul a clear edge. Chavez Jr. has the skills and pedigree, but his age, lack of recent high-level activity, and motivational concerns are big red flags. Paul’s physical advantages and training discipline should outweigh Chavez Jr.’s experience.’

OddsShark: Paul by KO/TKO (+140)

OddsShark writes, ‘Unless Chavez Jr. shows up in peak form, this is Paul’s fight to lose. He’s in better shape, he’s more active, and his power is real. Chavez Jr. might have the pedigree, but Paul has the tools and the drive right now.’

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. price

The full card will cost viewers in the United States $59.99 to watch.

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.: Tale of the tape

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

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