LAS VEGAS — Ryan Garcia at last obtained the one prize that had evaded him throughout his professional career: a world championship.
Garcia (25-2, 20 KOs) knocked down Mario Barrios with the initial two strikes he landed in the bout and comfortably secured a dominant unanimous decision, thus claiming the WBC welterweight title. It was a dazzling showcase of quickness and strength from Garcia, who delivered perhaps the most flawless showing of his career, asserting his superiority on the judges’ cards with tallies of 119-108, 120-107, and 118-109.
Garcia revealed a different facet of his abilities, heavily leaning on his right hand rather than his renowned left hook to pummel Barrios across the canvas throughout the entire contest. He caught Barrios off guard right from the start, assailing him with two strong right hands which floored him.
Subsequently, Barrios was utterly perplexed by the origin and timing of the blows, as Garcia overwhelmed him with a diverse array of strikes to both upper and lower targets. When Barrios anticipated a left hook, Garcia would unleash an overhand right, snap out a jab, or bury a left hook to the torso. The immense diversity and blinding quickness compelled Barrios to adopt a defensive posture for much of the encounter, trailing Garcia across the canvas and incapable of assembling his characteristic flurry of blows.
The only factor that potentially prevented Barrios from being halted was Garcia injuring his right hand during the bout. Nonetheless, it stood as one of Garcia’s most distinguished achievements in his professional career, as he finally fulfilled the high hopes set for him when he debuted as a professional ten years prior.
Garcia, 27, was navigating a challenging preceding few years, accumulating a record of one win, two losses, and one no contest. Amidst his defeats by Gervonta Davis and Rolly Romero, Garcia’s career suffered a major setback when his victory by majority decision over Devin Haney in 2024 was nullified following a positive drug test, leading to a twelve-month ban.
While his celebrity status endured, Garcia’s actions both inside and outside the ring have been embroiled in dispute, including a June 2024 arrest for reportedly inflicting approximately $15,000 worth of harm to a Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills hotel room, and a disqualification by the WBC a month later after frequently employing racist epithets against Black individuals and denigrating followers of Islam on a live broadcast on social media.
Nevertheless, Garcia was presented with the chance to contend for a global championship after the WBC reinstated him, and he capitalized on the opportunity by effortlessly dismantling Barrios. Although he came into the bout holding the championship, Barrios (29-3-2, 18 KOs) had recorded two draws in his preceding two contests, securing stalemates with Manny Pacquiao and Abel Ramos.
Though those previous matchups proved close, the encounter with Garcia was decidedly one-sided. Barrios was unable to equal his quickness, deploy his high-volume striking, or assemble any offense that would compel Garcia to alter his strategy. Barrios sought the guidance of Joe Goossen, who had formerly coached Garcia. But despite receiving tutelage from someone acquainted with Garcia’s style, Barrios was unable to raise his performance to his adversary’s standard.
Although Garcia eased off the throttle in the closing rounds, the outcome was never uncertain as he was declared the victor.
Subsequently, Garcia challenged reigning WBO junior welterweight titlist Shakur Stevenson, a clash anticipated to be among the year’s most significant bouts.

