LAS VEGAS – Robeisy Ramirez produced perhaps his most noteworthy win Saturday in two years as a pro.

The two-time Olympic gold medalist out-boxed Orlando Gonzalez in a 10-round battle between left-handed featherweights on the Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder undercard at T-Mobile Arena. The 27-year-old Ramirez won an unremarkable unanimous decision, as judges Max De Luca (99-91), Steve Morrow (97-93) and Don Trella (99-91) all scored the fight for the favored fighter by comfortable margins.

The Cuban-born Ramirez (8-1, 4 KOs) won his eighth straight fight since Adan Gonzales upset him by split decision in his four-round pro debut in August 2019. Ramirez soundly defeated Denver’s Gonzales (5-4-2, 2 KOs) on points in their six-round rematch in July 2020.

Puerto Rico’s Gonzalez (17-1, 10 KOs) entered their bout unbeaten, but the 26-year-old veteran took a steep step up in competition versus Ramirez. The elusive Ramirez’s speed and skill troubled Gonzalez, who regularly struggled to land clean, effective punches on his confident foe.

Gonzalez was clearly behind on points entering the 10th round. He tried to be aggressive in that round, but it was far too little too late.

The eighth round mirrored most of the first seven previous rounds, but Ramirez rocked Gonzalez with a left uppercut when there was about 1:20 to go in the ninth round. Ramirez quickly followed up with an overhand left as Gonzalez tried to retreat.

Ramirez’s right hook connected with about a minute remaining in the seventh round. Other than a right to the body, Gonzalez again had trouble catching Ramirez with flush punches in those three minutes.

Ramirez continued to defend himself well during the fifth and sixth rounds, when he often stepped back to avoid Gonzalez’s punches. Gonzalez tried to be active in those rounds, but he didn’t land many clean shots on the elusive Ramirez, who pot-shotted him for the most part.

Ramirez popped his jab for much of the fourth round. He also caught Gonzalez with a right hook up top and then a right hook to the body in the final minute of the fourth round.

They traded with about 15 seconds to go in the fourth round, when Ramirez seemed to land the harder punches.

Ramirez was the aggressor during the third round, though Gonzalez landed in combination at one point in that round and moved away to admire his work.

Ramirez and Gonzalez spent most of the first round jabbing, but the action picked up during the second round. Ramirez landed two hard left hands during an exchange in the second round, the second of which made Gonzalez retreat.

Keith Idec is a senior writer/columnist for BoxingScene.com. He can be reached on Twitter @Idecboxing.