- Five televised Mexico-on-Mexico bouts on the Cinco de Mayo PPV — Benavidez and Munguia headline above three undercard ledgers
- Prime Video PPV in the US, DAZN worldwide — T-Mobile is the busiest Mexican boxing card on the calendar
- The undercard value: Duarte, prospect bouts and Mexican title eliminators stacked behind the two main events
The Mexico vs Mexico Concept — All Five Cards
Right then. Cinco de Mayo at T-Mobile Arena Saturday night is the most ambitious card the PBC has put together in years. Five televised bouts. All of them Mexico-against-Mexico. Benavidez vs Zurdo headlines, Munguia vs Resendiz co-mains, and three undercard ledgers each pit Mexican against Mexican across multiple weight classes. This is not a token Cinco de Mayo card padded with one PPV main event. This is a whole night of Mexican boxing, top to bottom.
It's a Prime Video PPV in the US and DAZN worldwide. PBC's pick-up of Prime Video for the PPV side of things is paying out — the platform reach and the price point have hit the volume the company needed. T-Mobile's gate is at concert pricing. There's a real argument this is the busiest, deepest Mexican boxing card built since Canelo first headlined in Vegas.
Main Event — Benavidez vs Zurdo, 200 lbs
David Benavidez tipped 175lbs at Friday's weigh-in and Gilberto 'Zurdo' Ramirez made the 200 limit clean. Two divisions of grit between them. WBA and WBO cruiserweight straps on the line. Benavidez is the swarming pressure operator who has bullied Plant, Morrell and Andrade. Zurdo is the natural cruiser who unified the WBA and WBO at the weight years ago. The pick is Zurdo on the cards because the size and experience advantage is real, but Benavidez has hand speed for days. This will not go quietly.
Co-Main — Munguia vs Resendiz, 168 lbs
Don't sleep on this one. Munguia at 168 against the man who shocked Caleb Plant for the WBA strap in 2025. Armando Resendiz is one of the best body punchers in the division, and Munguia has a chin that has been dropped twice in twelve months. The Manny Robles team have called for PED testing all camp, which tells you exactly how serious Resendiz is taking this. The pick on the night is Munguia by majority decision but it's a coin flip. The body work in the middle rounds is what decides this.
The Three Undercard Mexico vs Mexico Bouts
Three more televised Mexican civil wars stacked beneath the headliners. A lightweight crossroads bout with two domestic Mexican contenders. A featherweight title eliminator with two Mexican-flag prospects on the line. A WBC bantamweight comeback bout for a former champion. The PBC has loaded this card so the casual fan tuning in for Benavidez gets a full night of Mexican domestic blood-and-thunder before the main event walks. Class booking.
Where The Value Is
If you're looking at this card from a betting perspective — and look, I'd never tell you to bet — the value is on Resendiz's body work scoring rounds in the co-main. Munguia is the bigger name, the bigger draw, the higher line, but Resendiz won his title by upset and is likely to be the bookies' underdog again. There's a reason the Manny Robles team are quietly bullish. Don't sleep.
The PPV Verdict
Make no mistake — this is one of the best value PPVs of the year. Two genuine title fights with serious title implications, three meaningful undercard fights, plus the Mexico vs Mexico narrative running through every bout. T-Mobile Saturday night will be one of the loudest fight crowds in Vegas all year, and the broadcast pay-off is one of the better Cinco de Mayo cards Mexican boxing has produced.
Prime Video and DAZN have it. T-Mobile is sold out. Tickets gone, PPV stacked. If you know, you know — buy the card.