Gary Antuanne Russell Calls Out 140-Pound Elite After Debated Hiraoka Win

By Robert Segal - 02/23/2026 - Comments

Gary Antuanne Russell did not spend much time talking about the scorecards after his win over Andy Hiraoka. The judges turned in 116-111 twice and 117-110 in his favor, but the reaction online moved in a different direction almost immediately.

I watched the fight and had Hiraoka winning. His bodywork wasn’t just something that looked good on camera; it changed how the fight unfolded. When those shots landed, you could hear the impact, and Russell reacted to them. Hiraoka’s power looked closer to a junior middleweight than a junior welterweight, and by the middle rounds, Russell was holding more than he usually does.

That stood out because Russell is normally the aggressor. He walks opponents down, throws in volume, and forces exchanges. In this fight, he spent long stretches backing up and trying to slow the pace. Hiraoka’s jab kept finding him early, and once the body attack picked up, the tone of the fight shifted. Even if someone edged it to Russell, it did not feel like a night that should produce 117-110.

Fans on X and YouTube reacted the same way. Many were not simply unhappy with the scoring; they believed Hiraoka did enough to win. The width of the cards only added to that feeling. In a fight that felt competitive, wide margins do not calm people down. They create doubt about how the rounds were being judged.

Russell chose to move on and start naming bigger fights at 140. From a career standpoint, that makes sense, but it also means he is not addressing the portion of the audience that walked away unconvinced. Without a rematch on the table, that reaction does not fade quickly. It follows him into the next fight.

This is why the win is not as clean as the record suggests. Officially, it is a clear decision. Unofficially, a noticeable slice of the audience questions it. When a fight produces that kind of split reaction, and there is no interest in running it back, the result never fully settles in the public mind.

For some fans, this victory now carries a mental footnote. They will see the win on paper, but they will remember a fight they believed he lost or at least did not control. That perception does not disappear because the belt stayed with him. It shows up in how seriously they take his callouts and how they measure him against the other names at junior welterweight.

If Russell moves straight into a major fight, part of the audience will approach it with skepticism. They will want proof inside the ring. A clear, dominant performance against a top opponent would quiet most of the noise. Another close or debated decision would bring this conversation right back to the surface.

He remains champion, and the belt confirms it, but full acceptance from fans will depend on what he does next and whether the next win leaves no room for doubt.

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Last Updated on 2026/02/23 at 3:24 AM