In a swift and brutal display, heavyweight Otto Wallin (27-2, 15 KOs) took merely 48 seconds to obliterate Onoriode Ehwarieme (20-5, 19 KOs) in the opening round  Friday at the Tropicana in Atlantic City. Wallin unleashed a vicious straight left, flooring Ehwarieme, who found himself unable to battle on.

In a dramatic battle of undefeated featherweights, Jan Paul Rivera (10-0, 6 KOs) graciously put an end to Justin Goodson’s (8-1, 8 KOs) undefeated streak. This epic encounter unfolded on Friday night at the Caribe Royale Resort in Florida. Rivera, in a display of sheer mercy, first introduced Goodson to the canvas in the third round, just to make sure he knew his way down. Then, in the seventh round, Rivera kindly repeated the lesson twice more before the referee stepped in at 2:43, probably to save Goodson from thanking Rivera himself.

Justis Huni turned up the heat in Brisbane, handing Troy Pilcher his first career loss with a thunderous second-round technical knockout at the Fortitude Music Hall. Pilcher tried to set the pace early, throwing everything he had in the first round. However, Huni, just 25 years old, wasn’t just there to play defense; he responded with a crisp body shot that signaled trouble for Pilcher.

As the second round unfolded, Huni shifted gears, delivering a brutal left hook to Pilcher’s head that sent him staggering into the corner. Huni, relentless and ferocious, didn’t let up, hammering Pilcher with a barrage of punches. The referee, Paul Tapley, saw enough and called it quits with 40 seconds left in the round, preserving Huni’s pristine record now standing at 10-0, while Pilcher faces his first setback, moving to 9-1-1.

Friday night at the Commerce Casino near downtown Los Angeles turned into a showcase for Omar Trinidad (16-0-1, 13 KOs) from Boyle Heights, California, who decided it was time to close the show with a bang against Ukrainian southpaw Viktor Slavinskyi (15-3-1, 7 KOs). Right from the bell, Trinidad wasn’t about wasting time, pressuring and pinning Slavinskyi like a poster on the ropes.

As the fight unfolded, it seemed Trinidad’s sheer size was doing half the talking. Slavinskyi, on his part, wasn’t just there to make up the numbers; the guy hung tough, exchanging leather late into the fight. However, a mean straight right from Trinidad had Slavinskyi rethinking his life choices, stumbling back to the ropes—a move so dramatic that referee Ray Corona had to call it a knockdown.

Not one to leave things half-baked, Trinidad delivered the final blow, sending Slavinskyi to the canvas once more. The ref, having seen enough, waved off the fight at 2:31, sparing Slavinskyi further punishment and the fans any suspense.

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