The decision has drawn criticism from fans on social media, who argue the slot should have gone to a more established contender given the card is being sold on DAZN pay-per-view. Several reactions pointed to Vargas’ recent outing against Austin Quintana, where he faced resistance against an opponent not considered top-tier at 140 pounds.

The frustration from fans usually boils down to the pay-per-view tax. When Jaron Ennis and Xander Zayas were announced for a unified title fight at 154, it was met with huge excitement. But when fans see a developing prospect, Emiliano, in the chief support slot of a $70+ event, the marinating of prospects can feel out of place.

Vargas (17-0, 14 KOs), a 21-year-old son of former champion Fernando Vargas, has been positioned as a fast-rising name by Top Rank. The co-feature placement signals continued backing from the company despite questions about the level of opposition on his record.

Mills (22-1, 9 KOs), fighting out of New York, represents a step up on paper but has not been widely viewed as a breakthrough-level opponent.

Matching him with Mills, who is tough and has a local New York following but isn’t a ranked threat, reinforces the idea that Top Rank is just looking for a safe way to get Emiliano a “win” on a big stage without risking the investment.

The addition of light heavyweight contender Ben Whittaker against Richard Rivera is arguably a tougher pill for fans to swallow.

Rivera is essentially coming off the couch. A 17-month layoff for a 35-year-old fighter against a young, athletic silver medalist like Whittaker is almost the definition of a gimmee.

Whittaker is known for his showboating and “Matrix” style, which works great for viral clips, but putting him in a lopsided fight on a PPV card feels like paying for a highlight reel rather than a competitive sporting event.

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