Sebastian Fundora charcoal portrait boxing pose WBC champion

Fundora Demolishes Thurman — Nasty R6 Beatdown in Vegas

Sebastian Fundora retained his WBC super welterweight title with a devastating sixth-round TKO of Keith Thurman at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on Saturday night. It was never competitive. Fundora set the tone within the first ten seconds with a crunching left cross and never looked back. Thurman suffered the first stoppage loss of his career. The size difference was everything we said it would be.

  • Sebastian Fundora (21-1-1, 14 KOs) retained his WBC super welterweight title with a sixth-round TKO of Keith Thurman (30-3-1, 22 KOs) at MGM Grand Las Vegas on Prime Video PPV
  • Fundora dominated from the opening bell — buckled Thurman's legs in round 2, increased the pressure every round until referee Thomas Taylor stopped it in the sixth
  • Thurman suffers the first stoppage loss of his career — Fundora said post-fight it was "a lot easier than I expected"

The Size Problem Was Real

Right then. We told you. The size difference was going to be the story of this fight, and it was. Fundora's nine-inch height advantage — nine inches! — turned what was supposed to be a competitive world title fight into a systematic beating. From the moment Fundora landed that thumping left cross within the first ten seconds of round one, Thurman was in survival mode. And One Time doesn't do survival mode well. Fundora's jab was a weapon all night. At 6'6" with an 80-inch reach, he was jabbing down on Thurman like a man poking a stick at something he didn't want to get close to. Thurman couldn't get inside. Every time he tried to close the distance, Fundora caught him coming in with uppercuts and hooks that snapped his head back. The second round was particularly brutal — Fundora buckled Thurman's legs with a combination that would have dropped most fighters. Thurman's chin held, but his legs told a different story. By the middle rounds, it was uncomfortable to watch. Fundora wasn't just winning — he was punishing. The blood came in the fourth. The sustained pressure came in the fifth. And in the sixth, referee Thomas Taylor had seen enough. The stoppage was merciful and correct. Thurman had nothing left to give, and Fundora was getting more dangerous with every passing minute.

Fundora's Post-Fight Words

Fundora's honesty after the fight was refreshing. He admitted he'd been "a little nervous" earlier in the day because Thurman has been such a "big name" in the sport. But once the bell rang, the nerves disappeared and the work took over. His assessment that it was "a lot easier than I expected" wasn't arrogance — it was an accurate description of what 20,000 people at the MGM Grand witnessed. The respect Fundora showed Thurman afterwards was class. Calling him a "Hall of Famer" and acknowledging that he'd looked up to One Time as a fighter growing up — that's the mark of a champion who understands the sport's traditions. Fundora beat Thurman convincingly, but he didn't humiliate him. There's a difference, and Fundora navigated it perfectly.

What's Next for Fundora?

The super welterweight division belongs to Fundora for now. At 28 years old with a physical advantage over virtually everyone at 154, he's going to be difficult to dethrone. The question is who's brave enough to try. Tim Tszyu's name has been mentioned. Jermell Charlo's return is a possibility. But honestly, who at 154 pounds wants to stand in front of a 6'6" fighter who just dismantled a former champion in six rounds? Fundora's team will be looking at the biggest available names and the biggest available paydays. The PBC on Amazon Prime relationship is established now, and Fundora has proven he can headline a PPV event. The next step is a unification fight or a crossover bout that cements him as one of boxing's stars rather than just a divisional champion.

The Verdict

This was exactly what we predicted — Fundora's size overwhelming Thurman's experience. The only surprise was how one-sided it was. Thurman was never in the fight. Not for a round. Not for a minute. Fundora's physical advantages, combined with his improving technical skills, made this a mismatch that the record books will remember as a dominant title defence. The towering champion of 154 is here to stay.

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