Hernandez to Make Professional Boxing Debut in December

Nico Hernandez is turning pro…

The 20-year-old Latino boxer, who claimed a light flyweight bronze medal at the 2016 Rio Games in August, will make his professional debut on December 10 at the CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Nebraska, on the undercard of unified junior welterweight world champion Terence Crawford‘s hometown title defense against John Molina Jr.

Nico Hernandez

Hernandez, who doesn’t have an opponent for his four-round bout yet, will fight as a 115-pound junior bantamweight after competing at the 2016 Summer Olympics as a 108-pounder.

Hernandez said he and his father/trainer Lewis Hernandez discussed the possibility of remaining amateur and trying to improve on his performance in Rio, but Nico said he really wanted to go the professional route.

“I made the decision because financially it would be better as a pro,” Hernandez told ESPN. “If I’m getting punched in the face, I might as well get paid for it. Now they’re letting pros go to the Olympics (as of the Rio Games), so there’s really no point in being an amateur boxer anymore since the goal is to make it to the Olympics.”

At the Rio Games, Hernandez ended the medal drought for Team USA’s male boxers, who had not won an Olympic medal since heavyweight Deontay Wilder claimed a bronze medal at the 2008 Beijing Games. Hernandez won a three-round decision against Ecuador’s Carlos Eduardo Quipo Palaxti in the quarterfinals to clinch a bronze.

Hernandez wasn’t considered a medal favorite when the Rio Games began, but his Cinderella run ended with a decision loss to eventual gold medalist Hasanboy Dusmatov, of Uzbekistan, in the semifinals. Two bronze medals are awarded in boxing.

Hernandez, who began boxing at age 9 and was approximately 122-13 as an amateur, returned home to Wichita as a hero. He was feted at a parade, and Wichita State University bestowed him with a four-year, full-ride scholarship.

Hernandez went 3-1 during the Olympics and became the first American light flyweight to win a medal since Michael Carbajal — who went on to have a Hall of Fame professional career — claimed silver in the 1988 Seoul Games. Hernandez said he plans to work toward a degree while boxing professionally.

“I definitely want something [to] fall back on,” Hernandez said.

But he is anxious to start his pro career.

“I can’t wait to go pro. I’ve been wanting to for a while,” Hernandez said.

Soto Defeats John Molina Jr. for His Seventh Straight Victory

Make that seven in a row for Humberto Soto

The 34-year-old Mexican professional boxer, a former WBC Interim Featherweight, WBC Super Featherweight, and WBC Lightweight champion, won a unanimous decision against John Molina Jr. (27-5, 22 KOs) in a fight filled with low blows.

Humberto Soto

Soto (65-8-2, 35 KOs) won on scores of 96-91, 95-92 and 95-92 in a fight in which he was docked a point for a low blow by referee Jay Nady and Molina lost two.

“I felt very good in the ring but it hurt me when he hit me below belt,” Soto said. “But I was able to suck it up.”

In the fourth round, Molina nailed Soto with a bad low blow and he went down. Nady gave Soto time to recover and issued a hard warning to Molina, telling him to keep his punches up. But he couldn’t.

Molina continued to stray low with body shots, landing low blows that knocked Soto to the mat in the sixth and seventh rounds, and Nady docked him one point each time.

In the eighth round, Soto landed his own low blow that sent Molina to his knees in agony, but Nady did not take a point. Each man continued to target the body in a grinding affair, although they hugged each other after tapping gloves to begin the final round.

And then moments later Soto nailed Molina low again and Nady took a point from him.

“I feel he had more low blows. They shouldn’t have taken two points from me,” Molina said. “He’s a veteran and did dirty stuff in there. Back to the drawing board for me.”

Molina lost his second fight in a row. He had been trying to rebound from an 11th-round knockout loss to Lucas Matthysse in April — one of the most action-packed fights of the year in which Molina knocked Matthysse down twice and was dropped three times himself before being knocked out.

Soto won his seventh fight in a row since Matthysse knocked him out in 2012.