YOU WOULD be forgiven for forgetting that Mauricio Lara is just 24 years old. The Mexican featherweight โ who challenges Leigh Wood for a featherweight belt this weekend in Nottingham โ looks unpolished and speaks with the assurance and nonchalance of one of boxingโs seasoned veterans.
Itโs late afternoon in Mexico City. โBroncoโ Lara, 25-2-1 (18), sits with his family and young daughter following a gruelling sparring session and tries to convince Boxing News why heโll have his hand raised on fight night.
โWood is a chicken. He couldnโt prove his injury from when we were supposed to fight last year โ he just didnโt want to fight,โ says Lara. โBut now I guess itโs his opportunity to prove himself against me. I am at the very best point in my career at the moment, so he is going to have to bring something special to beat me. He has no exit available this time.โ
A sell-out crowd is expected inside Nottinghamโs Motorpoint Arena this Saturday night. Laraโs opponent has been out of action since a dramatic win over Michael Conlan [rsf 12] last March โ BNโs 2022 British Fight of the Year โ and is priced as a sizeable underdog with bookmakers no doubt influenced by Laraโs breakout UK performance when he upset Josh Warrington in 2021.
โComing back to England? Not a problem,โ Lara continued. โBeing an away fighter is enjoyable for me. England is like my second home and I knew I would have to return in order to get the opportunities I deserve. We know that English fighters run away from Mexican fighters [laughs], so I am the one that has to travel.
โThe Nottingham fans can be as loud as the Leeds fans if they want, but that makes no difference to me. It comes down to just me and Wood in the ring โ not the 5,000, 10,000 or more outside it.โ
โBroncoโ walked through Warrington emphatically to cause a huge upset in fight one but had to settle for a Technical Draw in the rematch due to a clash of heads in the second round.
โMexicans are always underestimated,โ he explained. โNo one expected me to do what I did to Warrington โ but in my eyes, he was never going to beat me. Wood is a different fighter but I donโt see anything special in him. Heโs going to have to be special to beat me though, and if he does, he has the potential to be a great fighter.โ
Lara is interrupted by his daughter, Aitanita, and it offers the perfect opportunity for him to underline why he has chosen the fight game.
โI fight for my family, so that they can have better lives. I had to fight to survive when I was younger, along with my seven brothers, and thatโs made us tough now we are older. Itโs the Mexican way. Thatโs why I fight how I fight in the ring too, not walking backwards, not retreating, just coming forward and showing aggression in the middle of the ring.
โIf I am to become world champion then there will be more and more opportunities for me to provide. Thatโs what keeps me going each day. I will need to prove myself as the best in order to become world champion, but in my mind, there is no way that I will be leaving Nottingham without that belt. And I will make sure I keep my destiny in my own hands โ I wonโt be letting this fight go to the judgesโ scorecards.
โI am not coming to England to be the โchallengerโ. I donโt follow the rules. Thatโs why I was given my nickname โBroncoโ by an old trainer โ I am tough and canโt be tamed. Iโve been that way my whole life.โ
Lara is sometimes flippant. He claims not to watch, or enjoy, others boxing, but this doesnโt hamper his dedication to the craft. Alongside his father, Gerardo Lara, and coaches Alejandro Garrido and Isaac Rivas, he has endured a detailed camp including sharing many spars with super-featherweight belt-holder Emanuel Navarrete, alongside some talented prospects.
Often, boxers will refuse to look beyond the task at hand. But Lara is happy to plan further ahead. โOnce I beat Wood, I want Warrington next,โ he exclaims. โItโs personal between me and him now. He talks so much shit about me outside of the ring, but is never able to do any of his talking inside it. This was proven again when he lost to Luis Alberto Lopez at the end of the year. He doesnโt respect us as Mexicans.
โI want to retire Warrington. And if I can do it in his own house then that is even better. He is a dirty fighter and I will need to be more aware of that if we fight for a third time. I know that Lopez now has the title, but Warrington is still a fight that I need to draw a line under.โ
Becoming a world champion has been an obsession to the 24-year-old since that first Warrington fight and, consequently, is convinced that beating Wood is a mere formality. โIt will have been two years since the first Warrington fight when I step into the ring with Wood and Iโm confident of the same result,โ he concludes. โIf Wood wants to meet me in the middle of the ring then he will soon regret it โ I am the biggest puncher in the division and in the best shape of my career. Nothing will save him this time.โ