It is a must-win fight for both Jack Catterall and Arnold Barboza Jr. when the two clash for the interim WBO super lightweight world championship at Co-op Live in Manchester, England, and live on DAZN, on Saturday night.
Catterall (30-1, 13 knockouts) and Barboza (30-0, 11 KOs) enter the ring with nearly identical records with one man looking to inch closer to becoming the mandatory challenger to WBO titleholder Teofimo Lopez.
Plenty has been said between the two fighters and now it’s about time for the talking to cease.
Here, DAZN News analyzes which fighter has the edge across three key categories entering this vital bout for the interim WBO 140-pound title.
Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing
Catterall has been gritty in generating his current four-fight win streak — the last three opponents in Jorge Linares, Josh Taylor and Regis Prograis all being former world champions.
Through it all, the Chorley southpaw has shown power, dropping Prograis twice in their October fight en route to a lopsided unanimous decision.
And that is something Barboza will have to deal with.
Barboza’s ability to prod with his jab and turn that stick into a rapid multi-punch combination will help toward that cause. So will his five-inch reach advantage.
Whether he can keep Catterall from forward fighting and pressing the action in Manchester, though, remains to be seen.
The slight edge here goes to Catterall.
Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing
As aforementioned, Catterall has defeated three consecutive former world champions in Linares, Taylor and Prograis.
And the Chorley man could contend that he should be undisputed and undefeated altogether as many critics and fans alike believe he did more than enough to defeat Taylor in their original meeting back in February 2022, when Taylor was controversially awarded the victory by split-decision.
If anything, the controversial defeat has developed Catterall’s resolve and sharpened his mettle.
It is not that Barboza does not have quality experience to his name. He does, having defeated former world champions Jose Pedraza and Jose Ramirez in February 2023 and November 2024, respectively.
It is more that Catterall’s running of the gauntlet dating back to his initial meeting with Taylor cannot be denied.
He has the experience edge and momentum heading into this fight.
Dave Thompson / Matchroom Boxing
Catterall and Barboza have not shied away from slinging verbal jabs just as they are bound to trade leather Saturday night.
When the two sat down for DAZN’s Live Face-Off with Eddie Hearn serving as the moderator, Catterall, 31, called Barboza a “B-class fighter” and vowed to produce a knockout of the undefeated Long Beach, California contender.
Barboza returned fire, referring to Catterrall as “average” and vowing “if there’s going to be a stoppage, it’s going to be me stopping him.”
The 33-year-old also boasted “I’m overall better than him at everything” and warned that Catterall is “hungry, but I’m starving.”
Both men are well aware at the high stakes attached to this fight as a convincing, dominant performance will force the issue with Teofimo Lopez.
To that front, Barboza promises to return stateside with the interim belt in tow.
When he said just that, Catterall countered “you don’t believe that,” to which Barboza responded “I wouldn’t fly out to Manchester if I didn’t believe that.”
A lifetime of work for two fighters will prove fruitful for one.
Therefore, when it comes to mental warfare, Barboza’s steely confidence, and chip on his shoulder that he wears well, gets the slightest edge.
So which fighter has the edge going into this fight across three categories? It’s Jack Catterall, 2-1.