When the referee stopped the fight in the ninth round, many fans at ringside and online felt it was premature and that Quintana deserved the opportunity to continue. That reaction shifted the discussion almost immediately.
After Ryan Garcia criticized the stoppage, Vargas responded with a sarcastic tweet referencing Garcia’s prior PED issue. The comment pulled the focus back to the fight and kept the stoppage in circulation.
Some replies questioned his maturity. Others dismissed the comparison entirely. The tone online suggested that the performance, not Garcia’s comment, remained the dominant talking point.
Earlier matchmaking positioned Vargas as explosive and ahead of schedule. The fights against Quintana and Jonathan Montrel showed a fighter still learning how to manage resistance when the opponent refuses to fold. At light welterweight, that learning curve becomes visible quickly because experienced contenders do not give away rounds easily, and they punish defensive lapses.
Once the stoppage was questioned, attention shifted to how Vargas handled the criticism. The response extended the discussion and drew more eyes back to the ninth round. For a young fighter in a visible position, those moments linger longer than the official result.
The bout goes in the books as a victory. What stayed in circulation afterward were the exchanges, the left hooks that landed, and the debate over whether the referee stepped in too soon. Nights like that do not erase momentum, but they do slow it, and they tend to follow a fighter into the next matchup.
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