Boxing Results: Callum Walsh Wins Wide Decision Over Carlos Ocampo in Zuffa Debut

By Tom Galm - 01/23/2026 - Comments

Callum Walsh beat Carlos Ocampo because he stayed in control of distance, timing, and balance for ten rounds. Two judges scored it 98-90. One had it 97 -1. Walsh moved to 16-0 with 11 stoppages. Ocampo slid to 38-4. The fight took place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas on the first Zuffa Boxing card.

The opening round promised more than the rest delivered. Both men loaded up early, then backed off. Spurts of offense.

From a coaching eye, Walsh boxed with confidence bordering on comfort. Hands low. Feet set. He stepped in, let short combinations go, then slid out before Ocampo could answer. He was not looking to overwhelm. He was looking to touch, score, and move.

This fits Walsh’s recent run. In his last fight in September, he boxed conservatively and relied on speed and placement rather than sustained pressure. Same pattern here. He trusted his eyes and reactions. He did not force exchanges or sit down on shots to break Ocampo down.

Ocampo followed him around the ring instead of stepping across to trap him. That mistake cost him rounds. You cannot chase a fighter like Walsh and expect to land clean.

The knockdown and the deduction

The sixth round produced the only moment of confusion. Ocampo threw a left hook that caught Walsh behind the right shoulder as Walsh was turning. Walsh’s glove touched the canvas. The referee ruled it a knockdown.

Technically, it was soft. Tactically, it should have been a warning sign. Walsh adjusted immediately. Tighter guard. Straighter shots. Less posing.

In the ninth, Ocampo lost a point for a low blow. By then, it only widened a gap that was already clear.

Ocampo showed durability. He took clean shots and stayed upright. What he could not do was make Walsh hold his ground or pay for keeping his hands low. There was no threat coming back that demanded respect.

What this says about Walsh now

Right now, Walsh looks like a disciplined round-winner with speed, balance, and composure. From a trainer’s view, the concerns are also clear. He is not doubling the jab enough to open the body. He is not pressing when opponents slow. He is comfortable winning rounds instead of taking risks to close the show.

Against this level, that works. Against stronger junior middleweights who can jab with him, step inside, and punch after slipping the left, that comfort becomes a gamble.


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Last Updated on 01/24/2026