Curmel Moton returns Saturday for a 10-round fight against Wilfredo Flores, yet the more revealing part of his recent interview had little to do with this weekend. At 19, with only eight professional fights behind him, he speaks as if his place near the top of the division is something that will sort itself out in time rather than something he needs to chase.
“Eventually, the time is going to come when I’m at the top, and I’m one of the biggest names in the sport as well,” Moton said to Fighthype when asked about a future fight with Ryan Garcia. “And then if they still around, we going to have to meet up.” The response did not sound like a callout or an attempt to attach himself to a bigger name. It read more like a long-range expectation, delivered without urgency.
Pressed about whether he keeps a list of targets, he dismissed the idea. “I wouldn’t say that… just whoever’s up there.” The comment suggests he sees the current lightweight picture as temporary, a passing arrangement that will thin out by the time he arrives.
His career path matches that tone. Eight wins, six by knockout, and now a scheduled 10-round assignment at 19, which is an early extension for a prospect still building rounds. The decision signals confidence from his team, and his voice carries the same comfort.
Flores brings 19 professional fights into the ring, along with the kind of rounds, setbacks, and mid-fight adjustments that do not show up on a glossy record. He is not there to participate in a four-round exhibition of controlled offense, and over 10 rounds he will have time to ask questions that younger prospects are not always ready to answer.
Plenty of young fighters talk about the future. Moton talks about it as if he expects to stay there, and that sort of belief tends to reveal itself once the early pace settles and the fight begins to stretch.

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Last Updated on 2026/02/26 at 4:56 PM
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