Mendoza arrives in a similar position. The New Mexico native pulled off one of the biggest upsets of 2023 when he knocked out Sebastian Fundora to claim the WBC interim title, but the momentum from that win didn’t last. Mendoza dropped decisions to Tim Tszyu and Serhii Bohachuk before stopping Jesus Antonio Rojas last July, leaving him with one win in his last three outings entering this bout.
Both fighters acknowledged the importance of the occasion in comments included with the fight announcement.
“I respect Brian Mendoza and everything he’s done, but on March 28th at MGM Grand, I’m coming hungry and ready to take this opportunity,” said Tellez. “I’ve worked too hard to let this moment pass me by. I’m willing to leave everything in the ring because my goal is to get back to that world title fight.”
Mendoza echoed the urgency surrounding the fight.
“A win here turns everything around and puts me right back where I belong, with the best in the world at 154 pounds,” Mendoza said. “I’m hungrier than ever to get back to the top and ready to knock out whoever gets in my way, starting with Tellez.”
The bout holds obvious stakes for both men as the super welterweight division continues to sort out its contenders around the championship picture. Each fighter has already shown flashes of top-level ability, but recent results have left questions about where they stand in the hierarchy.
For Tellez, the fight offers a chance to restore the momentum he built during his early rise, when a short-notice loss to Sergio Garcia and a decision over Julian Williams put him firmly among the division’s up-and-coming contenders. For Mendoza, it represents an opportunity to remind observers of the power and opportunism that once caused the dramatic knockout of Fundora.
Neither fighter can afford to lose or look poor if they want to stay in the conversation at 154 pounds, making the March 28 bout less about hype and more about survival in a competitive division.


