Navarrete’s name still means something at 130 pounds. He is a three-division titleholder, awkward, busy, and battle-tested. Over the last three years, though, the version in the ring has looked different from the one who stormed through 126 and 130. The draw with Robson Conceição left many believing he had done enough to lose. The fight with Charly Suarez ended on a cut while Navarrete appeared to be trailing. He also dropped a split decision to Denys Berinchyk in 2024, a fight many observers felt was wider than the scorecards suggested.
Beating this version of Navarrete is not simple to interpret. A dominant finish would elevate Núñez immediately, while a hard, narrow decision would invite questions about timing rather than authority, and a loss would narrow his path near the top. That is why he keeps returning to the knockout.
A decision win would unify belts, yet a stoppage would alter perception in a way the scorecards cannot. Navarrete has seldom been broken down physically, so stopping him would suggest that Núñez’s 27 knockouts translate upward against a champion who has handled nearly every style at this level.
Against Christopher Diaz, Núñez went the full 12 rounds and earned the decision, but Diaz was the heavier puncher throughout. Núñez separated himself through activity and persistence rather than raw strength, which left open the question of how his power carries against top opposition.
Now he faces a 31-year-old champion who has taken hard rounds across divisions, while at 28, Núñez is entering what should be his physical peak. This is the kind of opponent he needs to handle decisively if he expects to be viewed as a real threat to O’Shaquie Foster and the other belt holders in the division.
Núñez and Navarrete meet Saturday at Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona. The main event streams live worldwide on DAZN.
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