Why this shot came so fast

Some fans have questioned why Figueroa landed straight back in a title fight after such a clear loss. The answer sits less with Figueroa and more with Ball’s recent choices. Since his disputed draw with Rey Vargas in March 2024, Ball has stayed busy without pushing toward unification-level danger.

He edged Ray Ford by split decision, then defended against TJ Doheny and Ronny Rios, both older fighters with limited upside. His most recent win, a unanimous decision over Sam Goodman in Riyadh, looked wider on paper than it felt in the ring. Goodman lacks power but found Ball repeatedly with combinations and controlled long stretches of that fight.

Against that run, Figueroa becomes acceptable. Not dangerous enough to derail the title run, credible enough to quiet criticism for a night.

Queensberry said it clearly. “WBA Featherweight king Nick Ball returns home to defend his crown against one of his toughest tests yet in a two-weight world champion, Brandon Figueroa, on February 7th,” the promotion stated.

Ball is unbeaten at 23-0-1, 13 KOs, and physically relentless. At 5-foot-2, he fights like a  cannon, always loading, always stepping in. What he has not done is chase the other belt holders at 126. Rafael Espinoza, Angelo Leo, Bruce Carrington, and Otabek Kholmatov remain untouched.

Figueroa will test Ball’s engine and durability. He will not test his willingness to gamble against elite threats. That answer still waits.

Date: February 7, 2026
Start time: 5 pm local; 12 pm ET; 5 pm UK
Streaming platform: TBA
Venue: M&S Bank Arena, Liverpool, England
Fight card: Nick Ball vs Brandon Figueroa

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