“He could have chosen somebody else. He had to fight me,” Ennis said to Bryan Fonseca, talking about Xander.
The comment reflects Ennis’ view that the fight represents a significant step for Zayas, who enters at 23 and will be facing a more established opponent on a larger stage than he has previously experienced.
While questioning the decision, Ennis stopped short of dismissing Zayas’ skill set. He noted that, compared to others at 154 pounds, Zayas offers more variety in his approach.
“I think he got a better skill set than most of those guys at 54,” Ennis said.
Even with that acknowledgment, Ennis looked at the fight through his own experience, emphasizing familiarity with high-profile environments and the preparation demands that come with them.“I’ve been here before. I know what all that takes,” Boots said, talking about prior appearances on major cards and large venues.
That’s the difference Ennis keeps coming back to. Zayas is stepping into the biggest fight of his career, while Ennis is treating it like another night at the office. He even called the whole thing “regular,” brushing off the extra attention around it.
That’s the difference Ennis keeps pointing to. Xander Zayas is stepping into the biggest fight of his career, while Ennis treats it like another night at the office. He called it “regular,” saying it’s just another day and another dollar, and left open the chance that the fight might not last long enough to fully judge Zayas once they get in the ring.
This is a massive ask for a 23-year-old, even one as polished as Zayas. It feels less like a competitive fight and more like a teaching moment that ends in a mid-round stoppage.
Zayas is incredibly talented, but Ennis is currently in that rare vacuum where talent meets peak physical prime. It’s hard to see Zayas escaping the same fate as Boots’s last opponent, Uisma Lima, even if he puts up a better account of himself for the first six minutes.
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