WILLIAM ZEPEDA must hope he never faces Tevin Farmer again after scraping by with another tight decision win over the American. Last night in Cancun, Zepeda aimed to capitalise on home advantage and improve on his fortunate split decision victory from four months ago in Riyadh, a 10-round bout that couldโve gone either way. This time, over 12 rounds, Farmer proved just as stubborn a puzzle.
Zepeda stuck to his tried-and-true game plan: relentless pressure, high volume, and punishing power to break opponents down. It had worked like a charmโuntil he met Farmer. The crafty Philadelphian, with years of ring savvy, wasnโt fazed. In the opening round, Zepeda unleashed a flashy three-punch combo that thrilled the crowd but barely dented Farmer, hinting at a long night ahead.
The Cancun faithful roared with every Zepeda success, but Farmerโs southpaw jab soon found its rhythm. It couldnโt fully shield him from the body-shot barrage, though. By round five, signs of trouble emergedโFarmerโs left arm faltered, his hand or elbow visibly bothering him.
Yet that same left kept snapping Zepedaโs head back. Then, with 40 seconds left in the round, Zepeda nearly closed the show. A flurry of lefts and rights battered Farmer, who dropped his handsโproof of injuryโand offered little defence. Slipping shots wasnโt enough against Zepedaโs onslaught; body blows landed with vicious intent. But Farmer fired back a defiant uppercut, stealing the last word.
Quitting wasnโt an option. Farmerโs grit shone through as he fought on, trading skill for Zepedaโs will. Both men showcased their best: Zepeda ploughed forward with venomous hooks, while Farmer ducked and countered with crosses and uppercuts. Neither budged. The final round brought controversyโa cuffing left from Farmer dropped Zepeda, only for referee Michael Griffin to wave it off as a slip, sparking crowd outrage.
The judges had the final say: Ed Pearson (Canada) scored it 114-114, Nathan Palmer (USA) gave Zepeda a 115-113 edge, and Rafael Ortiz Loyo (Mexico) saw it 116-112 for the hometown fighter. A majority decision kept Zepedaโs WBC Interim lightweight belt intact, paving the way for a potential showdown with full champion Shakur Stevenson. On another night, though, Farmer mightโve walked away the victor.
Zepedaโs record climbs to 33-0 (27 KOs), while Farmer falls to 33-8-1 (8 KOs).