FIGHT WEEK
Fundora vs Thurman — Saturday Night in Vegas, the Towering Inferno Awaits
Sebastian Fundora defends his WBC super welterweight title against Keith Thurman Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. One of the most physically one-sided matchups in modern boxing.
March 25, 2026
Boxing Lookout
- Sebastian Fundora defends WBC super welterweight title vs Keith Thurman Saturday March 28 at MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas—PBC Pay-Per-View on Prime Video ($74.99)
- 8-inch height advantage and 11-inch reach advantage for the champion—arguably the most extreme size disparity at 154 pounds in recent memory
- Fundora (21-1-1, 13 KOs) in his second title defense; Thurman (30-2-1, 22 KOs) chasing redemption at 37 years old after years away from title contention
- Main card 8pm ET, free preliminary bouts from 5:30pm on Prime Video and YouTube
The Physical Mismatch Is Genuinely Absurd
Right then, Saturday night in Las Vegas at the MGM Grand Garden Arena—this is fight week, and we're dealing with one of the most lopsided physical matchups the 154-pound division has ever seen. Sebastian Fundora, the WBC super welterweight champion, defends his crown against Keith Thurman. The size difference? It's not close. It's barely in the same postcode.
Fundora's 6'5½" with an 80-inch reach. Thurman's 5'9½" with 69 inches of reach. We're talking an 8-inch height advantage and an 11-inch reach advantage for the champion. At 154 pounds, that's genuinely absurd. You don't often see that kind of physical disparity at the world title level anymore. That's the sort of height and reach difference you'd see if they were fighting in completely different weight classes.
The Road Here
Originally, this fight was scheduled for October 2025, but Fundora picked up a hand injury that forced a postponement. Now here we are, and the wait's been worth it for Fundora's team. This is exactly the kind of fight the champion wants to be fighting. Fundora's in his prime, and he knows his physical tools are virtually unbeatable at this weight.
Fundora the Champion
Fundora comes in at 21-1-1 with 13 knockouts. His only loss? Tim Tszyu, the Australian southpaw who caught him with a brilliant performance. But Tszyu's not holding the title anymore. Fundora is, and he's making his second defense here against Thurman. The man is confident, and for good reason—his physical gifts are nearly impossible to counter.
Fundora said ahead of this fight: "I'm the younger guy, and I'm the champion. Lots of things favor me in this fight." That's not arrogance; that's just stating facts. The age difference is real. The size difference is real. The championship experience is real.
What's interesting is that Tim Tszyu, the man who beat Fundora, has picked Fundora to win this fight. That's a significant statement. If the last guy to beat Fundora reckons he's got too much for Thurman, that tells you something about the current state of play in the division.
Thurman Still Carries Serious Power
Here's where we give Keith Thurman his due. The man's 37 years old, hasn't held a world title since 2019, and he's had some rough nights against the elite. He lost to Manny Pacquiao. He lost to Mario Barrios. But Thurman's record reads 30-2-1 with 22 knockouts. That's serious power. That's the kind of punch output that demands respect, even in a fight where the physical odds are stacked against you.
Thurman's boxing intelligence is still sharp. He's got the experience of fighting at the highest level, the championship experience, the ring craft. He's been away from the limelight for a bit, but when you've got that kind of pedigree, you don't lose it overnight. If he can make this fight dirty, if he can disrupt Fundora's rhythm and use his experience, he's still got a shot to make it interesting.
But here's the brutal reality: Father Time is cruel. At 37, coming off time away from the ring, against a dominant young champion with an 11-inch reach advantage, it's a mountain to climb.
The Supporting Cast
The undercard's got some solid additions to keep the evening moving. Tellez versus Mendoza, Hernandez versus Gausha, and Hovhannisyan versus Navarro round out the bill. Nothing that's stealing headlines from the main event, but enough to make the whole evening worthwhile for the PBC faithful.
The main card kicks off at 8pm ET on Saturday night, with the free preliminary bouts starting at 5:30pm on Prime Video and YouTube if you fancy catching the undercard action before the big one.
My Take
Look, Fundora's size advantage at 154 pounds is obscene. It's the sort of advantage that's genuinely difficult to overcome. Thurman's got the boxing IQ and the power to make it interesting—he's not coming to Las Vegas to get schooled. But the clock's ticking on Thurman, and that height and reach disparity is massive.
Fundora by late stoppage. The champion's physical tools are just too much. By the eighth or ninth round, if Thurman's still there throwing leather, Fundora will find those openings and make him pay. That's the fight we're seeing on Saturday night.
But that's boxing, isn't it? You never know when one punch changes everything.