Oscar "El Jaguar" Negrete (18-1-1, 7 KOs) of Tierraalta, Colombia and Joshua "The Professor" Franco (14-1-1, 7 KOs) of San Antonio, Texas fought to a ten-round split draw in the main event of the Oct. 4 edition of Golden Boy Boxing on ESPN at the Hangar at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa, Calif. Negrete retained his NABF Bantamweight Title in a hard-fought fight in which both men threw over 1,000 punches. Each fighter received a score of 96-94, while one judge scored it a 95-95, resulting in a split draw.

"It was a great fight, but I felt I won," said Oscar Negrete. "He [Franco] threw a lot of punches, but I blocked most of them. To tell the truth, it made me uncomfortable when he threw a lot and then suddenly clinched. He's very talented. I give him my respect. He is a warrior. It ended in a draw, but we'll see if we get the rematch."

"I can't complain. It was a close fight," said Joshua Franco. "I landed the better shots and hurt him with clean punches. He kept throwing and throwing, which is not what I expected, but I adjusted. I would love a rematch."

In the co-main, Danielito Zorrilla (9-0, 8 KOs) of Toa Baja, Puerto Rico stopped Dakota Linger (10-1-2, 6 KOs) of Buckhannon, West Virginia at 2:59 of the third round of a super lightweight bout originally slated for eight rounds.

"I did well and fought calmly, like a professional," said Danielito Zorrilla. "I was comfortable and worked well. I have to talk to my promoter to see what's next, but I want to fight before the year ends."

Jousce Gonzalez (8-0-1, 8 KOs) of Glendora, California and Ivan Delgado (12-1-2, 5 KOs) of South Central fought to a six-round majority draw in a super featherweight clash. One judge scored the fight 58-56 in favor of Delgado, which was overruled by two scores of 57-57.

"It was a good fight, but I won," said Jousce Gonzalez. He's a tough fighter, but I felt I landed more shots and controlled the fight at a distance."

"I felt I did enough to win," said Ivan Delgado. "He missed most shots, while landed harder and cleaner punches."

Carlos Caraballo (9-0, 9 KOs) of Guayanilla, Puerto Rico defeated Felipe Rivas (17-22-4, 11 KOs) of Nogales, Mexico via KO at 1:47 of the sixth-round a bantamweight battle scheduled for six rounds.

"I did a good job and finished matters in the last round," said Carlos Caraballo. "He did his job. He came out hard and he worked, but I did enough to make the referee end the fight."