“How you’re the boogeyman when I’m the one chasing the boogeyman,” Carrington said to Fight Hub TV, questioning the narrative around Espinosa.
The unbeaten WBC 126-lb champion doesn’t dismiss Espinosa as a fighter. He acknowledged the reasons why some rate him highly, pointing to his height and the problems that style can bring over 12 rounds. Carrington even said he became a fan after watching Espinosa earlier in his rise, which adds a layer of respect to the matchup.
At the same time, he isn’t treating that difficulty as something that separates Espinosa from the rest of the division. Carrington’s view stays simple. Good fighter, tough night, but not something that puts him outside the pack.
He’s been asking for that fight since 2023, and from his perspective, that alone challenges the idea that Rafael is being avoided. If anything, Carrington sees it the other way around. A dangerous opponent doesn’t become off-limits just because people start attaching labels to him.
The broader message stays consistent with how Carrington has been talking since picking up the WBC belt. He believes the division should move toward the top fights, and Espinosa is part of that group. Not someone to avoid, but someone to face.
Carrington sounds like a fighter who sees the “boogeyman” tag as something created outside the ring, not proven inside it, and he wants the chance to prove it himself.
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