The stoppage leaves Navarrete holding two belts at 130 pounds and strengthens his standing in the title picture.
The injury began in the fifth round when Navarrete stepped in behind the jab and followed with straight rights and left hooks that snapped Nunez’s head back. As the rounds wore on, he kept touching the same spot, placing shots with accuracy rather than swinging wide. Between rounds the corner worked on the damage, but each exchange reopened it. Before the eleventh, the physician took a long look and advised the referee to wave it off.
Navarrete controlled range early. He worked behind the jab, kept his lead foot outside, and set his feet before letting combinations go. He mixed short uppercuts inside and hooks when Nunez dipped low. The jab set range and set the pace. The right hand followed.
Nunez needed to get inside and work the body. He had brief moments when he slipped low and tried to answer with hooks, but he could not hold position long enough to build any rhythm. When he attempted to punch at the same time, Navarrete’s length and timing beat him to the mark. The cleaner shots and steadier workrate belonged to the champion.
Navarrete’s workrate and sharper punching separated him.
By the later rounds, Nunez’s face showed the accumulation. His output dipped, his right side swelling badly, and he was reacting to feints rather than initiating. He protested the stoppage, but he was taking flush shots and the cut was deteriorating under every exchange.
Navarrete improves his record to 40-2-1 with 33 knockouts and leaves the ring holding two belts at super featherweight. With the IBF now alongside the WBO strap, he stands in position for mandatories on both tracks and remains central to any further unification talks at 130 pounds.

Boxing Fight
Boxing Fight
Boxing Fight
Boxing Fight
Winner Announcement – Emanuel Navarrete
Winner Announcement – Emanuel Navarrete
Winner Announcement – Emanuel Navarrete
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